Jeff Guisewite Inc. is a premier demolition and excavation contractor based out of Mount, Carmel, IL. While offering exceptional residential teardowns and removals, we also rent roll off dumpsters to more DIY homeowners. But if there’s a project you... more
Home & Garage Demolition in Sumner, IL
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Munson Construction
Munson Construction is a family-owned business offering demolition services throughout Robinson, IL. Since 1982, we've had the skill and knowledge to get the job done right the first time. If you're in need of garage or house demolition—you can count... more
Mitchell's Backhoe Service
Mitchell's Backhoe Service offers the greater Robinson, Illinois area quality demolition and site preparation services. We are the ones customers turn to when they need reliable and professional house demolition, concrete removal, and more. more
Holt Backhoe Service
Holt Backhoe Service Inc. began in 1989. Our extensive fleet of high-tech equipment allows us to complete projects both big and small with ease and efficiency from commercial demolition to and house demo, concrete removal, and more. more
Nearby Places for House and Garage Demolition
House and Garage Demolition Tips for Sumner, IL
House & Garage Demolition Tips
There are 3 ways to demolish a house or garage:
1. Use excavators and heavy machinery to tear it down.
This is the most common demolition method—simply tearing down the house or garage with the help of hydraulic excavators and other heavy machinery.
The debris is then hauled away to the nearest dump or recycling facility with the help of a dumpster or trailer.
2. Deconstruct it by hand piece-by-piece, top-to-bottom.
Deconstruction—or "demolition by hand"—is the process of stripping and deconstructing the house or garage piece by piece with the purpose of salvaging as much of the materials as possible, like doors, windows, beams, lumber, and more.
3. Deconstruct it in order to salvage what you can, then use machinery to tear down the rest.
The most environmentally-, time-, and budget-friendly option is a combination of deconstruction and mechanical demolition.
Once all materials capable of being saved and reused are collected, the remaining structure is then torn down and the non-salvageable debris is hauled away.