Excavation
Excavation & Site Prep in Idanha, Oregon: 2026 Guide
Cojo
May 29, 2026
7 min read
Idanha sits near the head of the Santiam Canyon, straddling the Marion and Linn county line where Highway 22 climbs toward the Cascade crest. Excavation here is high-mountain dirt work: steep terrain that has to be cut and benched, soils that stay saturated through a long wet season, deep frost and snow in winter, and a community touched by the 2020 Beachie Creek Fire. Whether you are clearing a rebuild lot, prepping a pad for a new structure, or fixing a drainage problem on a hillside, the dirt has to be handled with grade and water in mind first.
Cojo Excavation & Asphalt runs excavation and site prep for Idanha and the upper canyon from our Willamette Valley base, running the length of Highway 22 to reach it. We bring the equipment and the judgment to read high-elevation ground.
Excavation is everything that happens before construction or paving. In a high-mountain setting, the common scopes are:
The variables that drive scope and cost are in our excavation cost in Oregon and site grading cost in Oregon guides.
Excavation is the hardest service to price without seeing the ground, because much of the cost is hidden until you dig. The figures below are industry baseline ranges, not quotes. High-mountain work with rock, steep grade, deep frost, or long haul-off frequently exceeds them.
Industry baseline ranges. Actual cost depends on soil, rock, slope, access, haul-off, and scope.
| Scope | Industry Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| Site grading | $1.50–$4 per square foot |
| Land clearing (light to moderate) | $1,500–$5,000 per acre |
| Utility trenching | $10–$25 per linear foot |
| Drainage / French drain | $20–$40 per linear foot |
| Hourly excavator + operator | $150–$300 per hour |
| Haul-off / disposal | varies by volume and distance |
If one factor separates a good Idanha excavation job from a bad one, it is water. The upper canyon gets soaked for months, snowmelt adds to it, and steep lots collect runoff from everything above them. Bad drainage shows up as a soggy site, a failing driveway base, water in a crawlspace, or erosion cutting down a slope.
We design grading and drainage to move water on purpose: crown surfaces, cut swales, set culverts where flow concentrates, and run French drains where groundwater needs an exit. Handled at the excavation stage, this protects everything built on top, including any asphalt paving in Idanha that follows. Skipped, water finds the weak point and the repairs cost far more than the drainage would have.
The Beachie Creek Fire reached the upper canyon, and rebuild site prep remains a steady need around Idanha. These projects start by clearing remaining debris and dead timber, then grading a stable pad, then trenching for the utilities the new structure requires. Because the ground may have shifted or eroded since the fire, we re-evaluate drainage from scratch rather than assuming the old layout still works. The site prep is the literal foundation for everything the rebuild puts on top of it.
Every Oregon excavation job starts with an 811 locate. Before any bucket goes in the ground, underground utilities get marked, which protects you, us, and the lines. We handle the locate as standard practice. Larger site work in the county can trigger erosion-control and grading permits, and work touching the Highway 22 right-of-way may require ODOT coordination. We know the thresholds and build the permitting into the plan.
High-mountain excavation is not valley dirt work. The grades are steeper, the water and snow are heavier, and access can be tight at this elevation. We bring the right machines and the experience to read Cascade ground, whether that means catching a drainage problem before it becomes a foundation problem or recognizing when a slope needs benching instead of a straight cut. The long run up Highway 22 is routine, and we would rather scope a job accurately than lowball it and hit surprises.
Browse our completed grading and site work on the portfolio page, or learn more about our site prep and grading services across the canyon and valley.
Plan your French drain installation budget with 2026 Oregon pricing. Covers interior and exterior drains, yard drainage, and foundation waterproofing costs.
Understand land clearing costs per acre in Oregon for residential, commercial, and agricultural projects. Pricing by terrain, vegetation density, and disposal methods.
Compare drainage solutions for standing water. Ranked by effectiveness, cost, and suitability for Oregon's climate. French drains, regrading, dry wells, and more.
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