Excavation & Site Preparation in Tiny Township
Georgian Bay Siteworks handles excavation and site preparation across Tiny Township — foundation digs, basements, footings, trenching and rough grading — with our own excavators and crew. Based right here in Tiny, work guaranteed in writing.
Excavation is the part of a build that everything else sits on — literally. A foundation dug to the wrong depth, on disturbed or poorly drained ground, or without proper attention to the soil, creates problems that are expensive and disruptive to fix once concrete is poured. In Tiny Township, the ground itself sets the terms.
Tiny sits largely on sand and old sand plains — easy to dig but quick to erode and slump on an open cut, so shoring, slope control and drainage matter as much as the excavation itself, especially on shoreline lots. That is why we walk every Tiny Township site before quoting — looking at the soil, the water table, the access and the slope — and dig to suit the actual conditions rather than a generic spec.
Georgian Bay Siteworks runs its own excavators and crew, so the dig, the trenching and the grading happen on one schedule with one team responsible. This page covers what excavation in Tiny Township involves, what drives the cost, and the questions owners ask most.
Working near water in Tiny Township: the rules that apply
Tiny Township is unusual in Ontario: it sits outside conservation-authority jurisdiction. So excavation, trenching and grading near the Georgian Bay shoreline, dunes or wetland is not governed by a conservation-authority permit the way it would be elsewhere. Instead the setbacks and approvals come from the Ontario Building Code, the provincial Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF), and the Township of Tiny, with the Severn Sound Environmental Association (SSEA) providing environmental review and advice for the area.
One nuance worth confirming on shoreline lots: the Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority (NVCA) does regulate some properties in the area, in which case an NVCA approval is required. We confirm exactly which approvals your lot needs before any machine moves dirt.
The ground you are digging in Tiny Township
Tiny sits largely on sand and old sand plains — easy to dig but quick to erode and slump on an open cut, so shoring, slope control and drainage matter as much as the excavation itself, especially on shoreline lots. How an open cut is battered or shored, and how water is kept out of the excavation, is what keeps the work safe and the foundation sound.
We excavate with the finished build in mind — to the engineered depth, with stable cuts, and with the site graded so water drains away from the hole rather than into it.
What site preparation includes
Foundation & basement excavation
Digging to the engineered depth and footprint for footings, foundations and full basements.
Service & footing trenching
Trenches for footings, water lines, septic and utilities, cut to line and grade.
Rough & finish grading
Shaping the site so water drains away from the build and the lot is workable for the next trade.
Backfill & compaction
Backfilling and compacting properly so there is no settling against the new foundation.
What drives the cost of excavation in Tiny Township
| Factor | Why it changes the cost |
|---|---|
| Soil & water table | Loose, wet or unstable ground needs shoring and dewatering. |
| Depth & size of dig | A full basement is far more excavation than a footing trench. |
| Access & slope | Tight or sloped Tiny Township lots slow the machines. |
| Spoil handling | Hauling excess material off site costs more than balancing it on site. |
| Approvals near water | Lots needing NVCA approval add coordination time. |
From bare lot to build-ready
Excavation rarely stands alone. The same crew clears the lot, installs the septic and grades the site, so the foundation dig is coordinated with everything around it. See our full excavation and site prep services, and the lot development cost calculator for budgeting the whole job.
Excavation or site prep in Tiny Township?
Start with a site walk. Own equipment, the approvals handled, and a written quote based on your actual ground.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need conservation approval to excavate in Tiny Township?
Tiny Township sits outside conservation-authority jurisdiction, so work near water is governed by the Ontario Building Code, the provincial MNRF and the Township of Tiny rather than a conservation-authority permit. The SSEA provides environmental review but does not issue permits. Some shoreline lots are regulated by the NVCA, in which case its approval is required. We confirm what your specific lot needs before starting.
Can you dig in sandy or unstable soil?
Yes. Tiny Township ground is often sandy and loose, so we batter or shore the cut and keep water out of the excavation — standard practice for us here.
Do you handle trenching for services?
Yes — footings, water lines, septic and utility trenches, cut to line and grade as part of the same job.
How long does a foundation excavation take?
Most residential digs are a matter of days once access and weather allow. Larger basements or difficult ground take longer; we give a timeline with the quote.
How do I get a quote?
Book a site walk. We assess the soil, water table, access and slope and give you a written, firm price for the actual conditions.
