Woodstock Excavation Services
Woodstock is one of the Quiet Corner's most scenic towns — rolling farmland, historic homes, the pink Gothic-Revival Roseland Cottage, and the Labor Day Woodstock Fair. The Route 169 scenic byway runs through it, and the landscape is dotted with ponds and working farms across hilly, open ground. It's our most northern regular town at about 18 miles, and we cover it routinely.
32+
Local Projects
A+
BBB Rating
24hr
Response
Free
Estimates
Excavation Experts for Woodstock
Scenic rural community with historic farms. Roberts Excavation brings professional-grade equipment and experienced operators to every job in Windham County.
Services in Woodstock
Property Types in Woodstock
Residential
Single & multi-family
Commercial
Retail & office
Municipal
Town projects
Local Soil Conditions
Glacial Till & Sandy Loam
Rocky subsurface common
Our equipment is suited for Windham County terrain. Free site evaluation included.
Woodstock Permits
- We handle all permit applications
- Familiar with Windham County requirements
- Health dept. coordination included
Also Serving Nearby
Excavation on Woodstock's farms and rolling hills
Woodstock's rolling, open terrain and many ponds make drainage and grading central to most jobs here. Hilltop building sites give beautiful views but bring ledge and steeper grades that drive up basement and driveway costs, while the low ground near Roseland Lake and the town's many ponds carries wetlands setbacks and higher water tables. We evaluate the specific slope and soil before quoting because Woodstock parcels vary so much from ridge to valley.
This is genuine horse and farm country, so alongside septic, foundation, and driveway work we do a fair amount of agricultural site work — paddock grading, barn pads, riding-arena bases, and pasture drainage. Everything runs on private septic and wells, permitted through the Northeast District Department of Health, and we respect the Route 169 byway and historic-district sensitivities that Woodstock's land-use board watches closely.
