EXCESS SOILS
site development that cannot be reused on site as-is.
Excavated Soils, Solved
Every civil job creates excess soil. Trench spoils, basement digs, road widening, utility work, site cuts. When it cannot go straight back in the ground, it gets stockpiled, hauled, and tipped.
The real problem is not volume. It is variability. One load is clean and granular. The next is heavy clay, organics, debris, or mixed material that needs tighter handling and documentation.
Common Challenges
Hauling Costs Eat Margin.
Finite Airspace,
Fewer Options.
Variability
Breaks Flow.
Excess is Everywhere
Excess soils are not a rare issue. They are a daily reality for civil crews and project managers across Canada, especially where schedules are tight and disposal rules are strict.
It shows up in trenching, roadwork, site development, municipal upgrades, and redevelopment jobs. When material cannot be confidently reused, the default becomes haul it out. That keeps the job moving, but it often becomes the cost centre on the project.
Common sources include:
- Road and highway work
- Utility trenching (water, sewer, storm, gas, electrical)
- Site development and foundations
- Redevelopment and industrial upgrades
- Rail, port, and municipal infrastructure projects

Best-Fit Applications
When to Wash
- Utility Trench SpoilsHandles fast-changing trench mix. Recovers sand and aggregate, separates fines.
- Road Rehab and WideningCleans up dirty granular. Removes debris, sizes product, concentrates fines.
- Brownfield RedevelopmentReduces worst-case disposal. Recovers usable fractions where permitted.
- Site ExcavationBreaks up clay-heavy feed. Separates fines from coarse for better reuse.
Sustainable Benefits You Can Measure
Sustainability matters when it hits your costs. On many projects, excess soil can cost more to haul and dispose of than it costs to bring in new sand or base. Soil washing reduces landfill tonnes and truckloads, while keeping usable sand and aggregate in circulation so you import and haul less overall.
Learn how washing can recover value from contaminated soils.

