33551, 33552, 33553, 33508, 22125, 21969

Black River Contracting

Rapid City, SD

Black River Contracting provides garage and house demolition services for residential, commercial, and agricultural customers. We set ourselves above the rest with our customer-oriented service... more

BR

R.C.S. Construction Inc

Rapid City, SD

R.C.S. Construction Inc, you can count on us to deliver excellence at every stage of your house demolition project, from proposal through completion.... more

RC

BTD Enterprise, LLC

Rapid City, SD

BTD Enterprise, LLC has been providing quality garage and house demolition services for our clients in Rapid City and the Black Hills area of South... more

B

Rapid Junk Relief

Rapid City, SD

Rapid Junk Relief is the go-to junk removal and demolition company in the Black Hills. Based in Rapid City, South Dakota and serving the surrounding... more

RJ

Johner and Sons

Spearfish, SD

Johner & Sons has been serving Spearfish, SD and nearby communities for decades. We provide all kinds of services, ranging from demolition to excavating, grading, equipment... more

JA

Olson Excavating Inc

Rapid City, SD

Founded more than 35 years ago in Rapid City, South Dakota, Olson Excavating, Inc. has earned a reputation for providing reliable, high-quality excavation and demolition services... more

OE

House and Garage Demolition Tips for Deadwood, SD

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.