Oil Tank Removal in Salem, OR
Salem's 60-block grid wraps the State Capitol with a deep core of pre-war housing and 1948-1968 NESCA tract development radiating north and east. Government employment keeps real-estate turnover steady year-round, and most decommissioning calls come from one of three triggers: pre-listing prep, NW Natural conversion follow-ups through Lansing and Hayesville, or buyer's lender flagging an unresolved UST during underwriting. Reports walk into the DEQ Western Region office on Lancaster Drive NE the day they're signed.
Salem Tank Decommissioning Across the Capitol Grid and Beyond
State capital with a heavy government employment base (Oregon State Government, Salem-Keizer Public Schools, Salem Health). Real-estate turnover has been steady through 2024-2026, and lender scrutiny of UST disclosures is what drives most homeowner calls.
Tank conditions our crews see most often in Salem: pre-1970 buried steel USTs (500 to 1,000 gal), basement 275-gal Granby ASTs, post-conversion abandoned tanks (oil → NW Natural), and real-estate-driven decommissioning. Local layout shapes access and staging: I-5 to the east; OR-22 (Mission/Center) east-west; River Road and Wallace Road carry West Salem traffic; Lancaster Drive runs the east-side commercial corridor.
Services available in Salem
Underground Oil Tank Removal in Salem
Full decommissioning of buried heating oil tanks (USTs) in Salem under the Oregon DEQ HOT program. We locate, pump, cut, lift, and document, closing with a signed Decommissioning Report and lab-tested soil samples for the property file.
Most Salem-proper buried tanks are 500- or 1,000-gallon bare-steel cylinders installed between 1948 and 1968, the NESCA tract era. Older pre-war stock east of the Capitol skews 500-gallon; mid-century ranches are typically 1,000-gallon with wide-open access and single-day digs.
Get a quote// 02Aboveground Oil Tank Removal in Salem
Removal of aboveground basement, crawl-space, and exterior oil tanks (ASTs) in Salem homes, including disconnect, sludge pump-out, cut-down for door access, and recycling at a Marion County scrap yard. Faster and cheaper than UST work.
Salem basements with 275-gallon Granby tanks are routine half-day work, particularly common in the older NESCA and South Gateway housing stock. Plasma-cut sections sized for the doorway, scrap to a Marion County recycler.
Get a quote// 03Tank Abandonment In Place in Salem
When a buried tank sits beneath a driveway, retaining wall, or addition that cannot be cut without significant collateral damage, Oregon DEQ permits decommissioning by abandonment in place. We pump, clean, fill with inert slurry, and document the work.
Salem 1970s-80s remodels (additions, garage extensions, concrete patios) often sit over original tanks. When the structure isn't worth removing, OAR 340-177-0100(2)(b) abandonment in place is the regulatory path: CLSM flowable slurry through the existing fill pipe, soil samples from accessible sides.
Get a quote// 04Soil Testing & Contamination Cleanup in Salem
TPH-Dx, BTEX, and PAH sampling under DEQ protocol; if a release is confirmed, we expand the excavation, manifest impacted soil, and prepare the cleanup documentation DEQ needs to issue a No Further Action determination.
Salem's alluvial Willamette Valley soils allow lateral plume migration, similar to Bethel rather than the contained vertical plumes of South Hills clay. Releases here can spread under foundations or storm drains; our sampling grid is wider on the sidewalls than on hillside jobs.
Get a quoteOil tank removal challenges specific to Salem
Oregon's capital, a 60-block grid of pre-war homes wrapped around the State Capitol, with mid-century neighborhoods radiating north and south.. The issues our crews see most often here:
Buyer's lender flagging "unknown UST" two weeks before closing, by far the most common trigger in our call volume
NW Natural service expansions through Lansing, Hayesville, and Sunnyslope leaving abandoned-but-unclosed tanks behind
Pre-1990 sand-fill closures that don't satisfy current OAR 340-177 requirements and need re-decommissioning at sale
Tight downtown lots where the excavator has to access through a single gate; staging matters more than dig speed
Tank conditions we see in Salem
Pre-war housing concentrated near Bush's Pasture Park, Willamette University, and the Capitol Mall. Mid-century ranches dominate NESCA, Hayesville, and South Gateway. Newer subdivisions in Cordon Road and South Salem hills mostly post-date oil-heat era.
Local context — Salem
I-5 to the east; OR-22 (Mission/Center) east-west; River Road and Wallace Road carry West Salem traffic; Lancaster Drive runs the east-side commercial corridor.
Why hire us in Salem
Salem tank patterns
Most jobs here involve pre-1970 buried steel USTs (500 to 1,000 gal) or basement 275-gal Granby ASTs. Knowing the era and configuration before the truck arrives saves hours on locate, dig, and lift.
Local conditions
Pre-war housing concentrated near Bush's Pasture Park, Willamette University, and the Capitol Mall. Mid-century ranches dominate NESCA, Hayesville, and South Gateway. Newer subdivisions in Cordon Road and South Salem hills mostly post-date oil-heat era.
Salem-specific challenges
Buyer's lender flagging "unknown UST" two weeks before closing, by far the most common trigger in our call volume.
Documentation that closes the file
Decommissioning Report submitted to the Salem DEQ office on Lancaster Drive within 60 days. Closeout assignment number arrives 30 to 60 days after that, and that's what shows up clean in the next buyer's due diligence.
Areas around Salem
Crews dispatch from Salem across the surrounding Marion–Polk corridor.
Salem Oil Tank Pros in Salem: common questions
Schedule Your Salem Tank Decommissioning
From a 1920s home near Bush's Pasture Park to a 1958 NESCA ranch to a Sunnyslope split-level, every Salem job runs the same path: locate, permit, decommission, sample, and file the Decommissioning Report DEQ needs to close the property file.
Call (503) 555-0100