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Foundations

Basement & Foundation Excavation in Big Rapids, MI

Precision digs for full basements, crawl spaces, additions, and frost-depth footings across Mecosta County — dug to grade, held to grade, and backfilled right so your foundation stays dry.

The Dig That Everything Else Sits On

A foundation excavation is the one part of a build where "close enough" is expensive. Dig two inches shallow and the footing crew is hand-shoveling on your dime. Dig a foot too deep and you're paying for engineered fill and compaction you never needed. Get the hole out of square and the wall contractor loses a day resetting layout. Big Rapids Excavating digs basements and foundations the boring way — checked against the plan, shot with a laser or GPS grade control, and handed off to the footing crew exactly where they need it.

We work with homeowners building their own place, builders who need a dirt contractor that keeps their schedule, and property owners around Big Rapids, Canadian Lakes, and Stanwood putting up garages, additions, and pole barns.

Foundation Excavation Services

  • Full basement excavation — complete digs for new homes, including overdig for wall forming, spoil management, and haul-off or on-site stockpiling.
  • Crawl space excavation — shallower digs for cottages, additions, and lake homes where a full basement doesn't pencil out.
  • Walkout basement digs — cutting a walkout into a slope is our favorite kind of job in this rolling glacial terrain; we shape the daylight side so it drains away, not in.
  • Frost footings and trench footings — for garages, pole barn perimeters, decks, and additions, dug below local frost depth.
  • Addition excavation — tight-access digs beside an existing house, protecting the foundation that's already there.
  • Backfill and rough grading — placed in lifts against cured, braced walls, with the grade sloped to move water away from the house.
  • Utility trenching — water, electric, and septic lines trenched while the machine is already on site.

How a Basement Dig Goes, Step by Step

  1. Plan & StakeWe review your foundation plan, confirm benchmark elevations, and stake the dig with offsets so nothing gets lost when the digging starts.
  2. MISS DIG 811 & AccessUtility locates are called in (it's free and it's the law), and we plan machine access, spoil piles, and truck routes so your lot isn't destroyed getting to the hole.
  3. Strip & Stockpile TopsoilGood topsoil is worth money. We strip it first and pile it separately so it goes back on your yard at final grade instead of getting buried.
  4. Excavate to GradeThe hole comes out at the planned elevation with proper overdig for the wall crew, checked with laser or GPS — not eyeballed.
  5. Footing-Ready HandoffWe coordinate directly with your builder or foundation contractor so forms follow the excavator within days, not weeks. An open hole in the rain helps nobody.
  6. Backfill & Rough GradeAfter walls are cured, damp-proofed, and braced, we backfill in compacted lifts and rough-grade the lot to drain away from the foundation.

What Basement & Foundation Excavation Costs

Foundation digs are usually priced per job after a site look, but these planning ranges reflect typical regional numbers:

ProjectTypical RangeWhat Drives the Price
Full basement dig, new construction$10,000 – $30,000Footprint, depth, soil, haul-off distance
Crawl space excavation$3,000 – $10,000Depth, footprint, access
Frost footings / trench footings$1,500 – $6,000Linear feet, depth, soil conditions
Backfill & rough grade$1,500 – $5,000Material needs, lot size
Machine + operator (hourly)$120 – $250 / hrMachine size; common for small digs
Hauling spoils off site$8 – $25 / cu ydTrucking distance and dump fees

Ranges are based on regional industry data for planning purposes, not a quote. Keeping spoils on site, good machine access, and dry-season scheduling all pull real money off the total. We put exact numbers in writing after a free site visit.

Digging in Mecosta County Ground

Most of the ground around Big Rapids is sandy glacial outwash and moraine — and for basement work, that's mostly good news. Sand digs fast, drains well, and rarely needs blasting or hammering. But it comes with its own rules:

  • Sand doesn't hold a vertical wall. Dry sand sloughs, so basement digs here need properly laid-back sides and enough overdig to keep the hole safe and workable. We slope the excavation instead of gambling with a cave-in.
  • Water table surprises near lakes and the Muskegon River. Lots around Canadian Lakes, School Section Lake, and the river corridor can hit groundwater higher than expected. Sometimes the answer is a shallower basement, a crawl space, or a walkout design — better to know before the plans are final. We're happy to dig a test hole first.
  • Occasional clay pockets and boulders. Heavier ground east toward Remus and glacial boulders anywhere can slow a dig. Boulders come out; we plan for them rather than pretending they don't exist.

Frost Depth: Why Footings Go Deep Here

Michigan code requires footings to bear below the frost line, and in this part of the state that means roughly 42 inches of cover — your building inspector sets the exact number for your site. Footings placed shallower than frost depth heave when the ground freezes, and a heaved footing cracks walls, racks door frames, and never really gets better. It's the reason "my buddy with a backhoe" digs cost so much to fix. We dig every footing to the inspected depth, on undisturbed soil, the first time.

Seasonal Timing for Foundation Work

  • Spring (March–May): Frost is leaving the ground and Michigan's seasonal frost laws restrict heavy trucking on most county roads — concrete, stone, and equipment moves get slower and pricier. Use this window to finalize plans and permits.
  • Summer (June–August): Prime digging. Dry holes, fast concrete scheduling, stable trench walls.
  • Fall (September–November): Excellent conditions, but the calendar gets tight — a foundation poured and backfilled before freeze-up can be framed all winter. This is the deadline season.
  • Winter: Digs are possible with frost teeth and ground protection, but frozen backfill and cold-weather concrete add cost. If you can plan around it, do.

One Crew From Raw Land to Ready Pad

Most basement digs around here don't start with a hole — they start with trees, brush, and no driveway. We handle the whole sequence in one mobilization: land clearing, a construction drive that concrete trucks can actually use, the basement or footing dig, the septic system, and final grading. One point of contact, one schedule, no finger-pointing between subs.

Call (231) 450-5269 or send the form below with your plans — even rough ones — and we'll give you a straight answer on your foundation dig.

Building This Year?

Get your dig on the schedule before the fall rush and winter freeze.

Call (231) 450-5269
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Tell us what you're planning — a new driveway, a septic system, a cleared building site — and we'll follow up with straight answers and a written estimate. No pressure, no runaround.

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(231) 450-5269

Serving Big Rapids, Canadian Lakes & all of Mecosta County

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