Syracuse Construction Accident Lawyers

If you were seriously injured on a construction site in Syracuse, our Syracuse construction accident lawyers can help you understand your legal options and protect time-sensitive evidence. Construction injury cases can involve workers’ compensation, New York Labor Law claims, third-party negligence, defective equipment, unsafe property conditions, and several companies whose responsibilities overlap. Porter Law Group represents injured workers and families across Syracuse, Onondaga County, Central New York, and the rest of New York State after serious job-site accidents.

Most New York personal injury lawsuits must be filed within three years under CPLR 214, but construction evidence can disappear much sooner. Scaffolds get rebuilt, equipment is repaired, contractors leave the site, incident reports are rewritten into company files, and witnesses move to the next job. Claims involving a city, county, public authority, school district, or New York State can have much shorter notice deadlines. Porter Law Group handles Syracuse construction accident cases on a contingency fee basis, so there is nothing upfront and nothing unless we win. Call 833-PORTER9 for a free, no-obligation case review.

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A construction injury can leave a worker dealing with emergency care, surgery, missed work, workers’ compensation forms, pressure from supervisors, and calls from insurers before the full injury picture is clear. The legal issues are different from an ordinary workplace injury because the property owner, general contractor, construction manager, subcontractors, equipment suppliers, and outside vendors may all control different parts of the proof. Our attorneys move quickly to preserve site evidence, identify every responsible party, and evaluate whether the case includes a third-party claim in addition to workers’ compensation.

Why Choose Porter Law Group as Your Syracuse Construction Accident Lawyers?

You are most likely to need a Syracuse construction accident lawyer when the injury is serious, the site involved several contractors, a fall or falling object was involved, safety equipment failed, a machine or vehicle caused harm, or your employer and the property owner are giving different accounts of what happened. Construction defendants often begin protecting themselves immediately. They may inspect the scene, collect statements, repair equipment, move materials, or shift responsibility to another contractor. Injured workers need their own team preserving the evidence and applying New York construction law to the facts.

What a Construction Accident Lawyer Does

A construction accident lawyer handles work that is difficult to manage while recovering from a job-site injury. In a serious Syracuse construction case, the early legal work often includes:

  1. Preserving the site record. We look for photographs, video, incident reports, OSHA materials, safety meeting notes, daily logs, tool-box talk records, inspection sheets, weather records, and any repair or removal work done after the incident.
  2. Identifying every responsible party. Construction sites often involve property owners, general contractors, construction managers, subcontractors, vendors, truck drivers, engineers, architects, equipment rental companies, and manufacturers.
  3. Evaluating workers’ compensation and third-party claims together. Workers’ compensation may provide benefits through the employer, while a separate personal injury claim may exist against a property owner, contractor, equipment company, or another non-employer party.
  4. Applying New York Labor Law to the accident facts. Sections 200, 240, and 241 can matter in construction cases, but each has different proof requirements and limits. The correct theory depends on what happened and who controlled the work.
  5. Documenting the full harm caused by the injury. We gather medical records, imaging, specialist reports, therapy notes, work restrictions, wage documentation, and information about how the injury changed daily life.

Local Syracuse and Onondaga County Knowledge

Syracuse construction cases often reflect the local work environment. Active sites may involve hospital-area construction around University Hill, campus projects, downtown redevelopment, commercial work near Destiny USA and the Inner Harbor, residential construction across Onondaga County, road and bridge work, or the NYSDOT I-81 Viaduct Project. NYSDOT describes that project as replacing the aging elevated downtown viaduct with an at-grade Community Grid and redesignating I-481 as the new I-81. When a construction injury occurs near a highway project, detour, bridge, lane shift, excavation, or public work zone, the investigation may require project records and public-entity deadline analysis.

Most Syracuse personal injury lawsuits are filed in Onondaga County Supreme Court at 401 Montgomery Street, Syracuse, NY 13202. Civil filings in Onondaga County are handled through mandatory e-filing, and the court sits in New York’s Fifth Judicial District. Local knowledge matters because construction cases often turn on site access, project sequencing, contractor relationships, local medical records, and the way a claim will be litigated if an insurer will not resolve it fairly.

What Sets Porter Law Group Apart

The lawyers at Porter Law Group have decades of experience representing individuals and families whose lives have been changed by catastrophic injuries, unsafe property conditions, defective equipment, and serious workplace incidents. We prepare construction accident cases around the proof defendants are likely to contest, including who controlled the work, whether a safety rule applied, whether equipment failed, whether an outside party contributed to the accident, and how the injury affects the worker’s future. You can read client testimonials, review case results from prior matters, and meet our team on the Attorneys and Staff page.

What Our Syracuse Clients Say

Best in Syracuse

Best in Syracuse! Experience. Knowledge. Professionalism. Compassion. Success.

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Best Trial Lawyer in Syracuse

A fantastic bunch of lawyers! Mike Porter is the best trial lawyer in Syracuse! He and his lawyers are so professional. And they fight hard for their clients. I highly recommend the Porter Law Group without reservation! AAA+++

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Strongly Recommend

Porter Law Group in Syracuse is amazing and I’d recommend them to anyone! Eric Nordby helped me find comfort and closure when working with me for my case. His response and timing with getting back to me with any questions or concerns was quick! He was very friendly and not like other lawyers. I strongly recommend Porter Law Group in Syracuse for anyone looking for a good firm!

Hannah Knighton
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Construction Accident Cases We Handle in Syracuse

Porter Law Group represents construction workers and other injured people after serious accidents on job sites throughout Syracuse and Onondaga County. Some cases happen on large public or commercial projects. Others happen on smaller residential sites, maintenance jobs, demolition work, delivery areas, or temporary work zones. The size of the project does not determine whether the injury is serious or whether a third-party claim exists.

Falls, Scaffolds, Ladders, and Elevation Hazards

Falls from heights are among the most common serious construction accidents. We handle cases involving scaffolding and fall accidents, ladder falls, roof falls, unprotected floor openings, unsafe platforms, missing guardrails, improper harness systems, falling tools, and falling materials. These cases may involve New York’s Scaffold Law, site-specific safety plans, manufacturer instructions, inspection records, and testimony about who directed the work.

Heavy Equipment, Vehicles, and Machinery

Construction sites rely on cranes, forklifts, excavators, loaders, trucks, saws, lifts, compactors, hoists, and other equipment that can cause severe harm when used, maintained, or coordinated unsafely. We investigate crane accidents, forklift accidents, caught-in machinery incidents, backing accidents, loading-zone injuries, defective tools, and machinery failures. When a tool or machine may be defective, the claim can overlap with defective equipment and machinery principles.

Electrical, Demolition, Excavation, and Collapse Accidents

We also represent workers injured by electrical accidents, exposed wiring, live power lines, trench collapses, excavation failures, demolition hazards, structural instability, and building collapse accidents. Demolition and renovation work can create additional hazards, including hidden utilities, unstable walls, toxic exposure, falling debris, and unsafe temporary supports. These cases require a careful review of plans, permits, contracts, safety meetings, site inspections, and the sequence of work before the accident.

Workers’ Compensation and Third-Party Claims After a Syracuse Construction Accident

Construction workers often hear that workers’ compensation is their only option. That is not always complete. Workers’ compensation usually provides benefits through the employer’s insurance system and generally prevents a direct lawsuit against the injured worker’s own employer for the same injury. A separate third-party claim may exist when a non-employer party contributed to the accident.

Third-party claims can involve property owners, general contractors, construction managers, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, rental companies, maintenance contractors, material suppliers, negligent drivers, or public entities. For example, a worker may have a workers’ compensation claim through the employer and a separate personal injury claim against a property owner that failed to provide proper fall protection, a subcontractor that created an electrical hazard, or a manufacturer whose equipment failed during normal use.

The key is coordination. A construction accident lawyer should evaluate both paths at the same time because statements, medical records, incident reports, and hearing testimony in one claim can affect the other. We help clients avoid inconsistent accounts, preserve evidence for every claim, and understand how the different systems interact.

Syracuse Construction Sites and Local Project Factors

Local project context can matter in a construction accident case. Syracuse and Onondaga County include public infrastructure work, university and hospital construction, downtown renovation, industrial projects, residential development, and highway work. A fall in a private apartment renovation may require a different investigation than a trench collapse on a public utility job, a crane incident at an industrial facility, or a struck-by accident in a highway work zone. The first question is always practical: who controlled the area, who directed the work, and who had the authority to correct the hazard?

The I-81 Viaduct Project is an example of why local construction facts matter. NYSDOT describes the project as replacing the 1.4-mile elevated downtown viaduct with an at-grade Community Grid, redesignating existing I-481 as the new I-81, and building the work through multiple construction contracts. A serious injury connected to a public infrastructure site may involve contractors, subcontractors, traffic control companies, equipment vendors, public agencies, project engineers, and short notice rules. The date, location, contract package, lane setup, and work activity can all affect the investigation.

Large economic development projects can also create complex contractor chains. The Micron project planned for White Pine Commerce Park in the Town of Clay is described by Micron and Empire State Development as up to $100 billion over more than 20 years for up to four chip fabrication facilities, with thousands of direct and construction jobs expected over time. A major industrial project may involve layered contracts, specialized equipment, temporary structures, electrical work, excavation, material handling, and outside vendors. If a worker is injured, the claim may depend on documents held by several companies, not only the direct employer.

Local medical and court logistics can matter too. Severe job-site injuries may be treated at Syracuse-area hospitals, and civil lawsuits tied to Syracuse construction incidents often proceed in Onondaga County Supreme Court. That does not mean every claim ends in court, but it does mean the case should be prepared with admissible proof from the beginning. Clear photographs, reliable witness names, preserved equipment, medical records, and contract documents can become important months later when the defense asks who controlled the work and whether the accident could have been prevented.

Public and private projects also produce different document trails. A private commercial build may require leases, construction contracts, certificates of insurance, subcontractor agreements, and owner communications. A public project may add bid documents, public agency inspection logs, traffic control plans, change orders, and notice requirements. A residential job may turn on who hired the contractor, whether the work was covered by New York Labor Law, and whether an outside vendor supplied defective equipment. The investigation should match the project, not rely on a generic checklist. That distinction can change the proof request immediately.

New York Construction Accident Laws Every Syracuse Victim Should Know

New York construction cases often involve legal rules that do not apply to ordinary injury claims. The right theory depends on the work being performed, the type of accident, the parties involved, and the exact safety rule that may have been violated. This overview is not legal advice for a specific case, but it explains the rules that often shape the investigation.

Labor Law Section 200

New York Labor Law Section 200 reflects the general duty to provide workers with a reasonably safe place to work. In many cases, the analysis focuses on who controlled the work, who created or knew about the dangerous condition, and whether the owner or contractor had authority over the injury-producing activity. Our article on Labor Law 200 explains this concept in more detail.

Labor Law Section 240, the Scaffold Law

Labor Law Section 240, often called the Scaffold Law, applies to certain elevation-related risks in construction, demolition, repair, alteration, painting, cleaning, and similar work. It can apply when a worker falls from a height or is injured by a falling object because proper protection was not provided. Cases involving scaffolds, ladders, hoists, ropes, stays, braces, pulleys, and other safety devices require careful analysis of the task and the accident mechanism. Read more about New York’s Scaffold Law.

Labor Law Section 241 and Industrial Code Rules

Labor Law Section 241 can apply to construction, excavation, and demolition work when a specific New York Industrial Code rule was violated and that violation contributed to the injury. These cases often involve concrete safety requirements for floors, passageways, ladders, scaffolds, demolition, excavation, electrical hazards, material storage, or protective equipment. A successful claim usually requires more than a general allegation that the site was unsafe. It requires identifying the rule, proving how it applied, and connecting the violation to the injury. Our guide to Labor Law 241 covers the issue further.

Deadlines, Comparative Fault, and Public Projects

Most personal injury lawsuits in New York must be filed within three years under CPLR 214. Wrongful death claims generally have a two-year deadline under EPTL 5-4.1. Claims involving a municipality, public authority, school district, or other public corporation may require a Notice of Claim within 90 days under General Municipal Law 50-e. Claims against New York State can have separate Court of Claims deadlines. New York also follows comparative negligence under CPLR 1411, which means fault arguments must be evaluated carefully instead of assumed from a supervisor’s or insurer’s statement.

Free Consultation With a Syracuse Construction Accident Lawyer

Talk to an experienced Syracuse construction accident attorney about your legal options today.

What to Do After a Construction Accident in Syracuse

Your first priority is medical care. Get emergency help when needed, tell medical providers the injury happened at work, and follow all treatment instructions. Construction injuries can worsen over time, especially head trauma, spine injuries, internal injuries, crush injuries, burns, ligament damage, and fractures. Prompt care protects your health and creates a medical record that connects the injury to the job-site event.

When you are safe, take practical steps to preserve the claim. If you cannot do these yourself, ask someone you trust for help:

  1. Report the accident promptly. Notify your supervisor or employer and follow site procedures for written incident reporting. Keep a copy of anything you submit or receive.
  2. Photograph the site before it changes. Capture scaffolds, ladders, platforms, debris, tools, machines, floor openings, guardrails, lighting, weather, warning signs, and the surrounding work area from several angles.
  3. Collect witness information. Coworkers, subcontractors, delivery drivers, safety officers, supervisors, or nearby workers may be reassigned quickly after the incident.
  4. Preserve damaged equipment and documents. Do not throw away hard hats, harnesses, footwear, tools, clothing, or paperwork related to the incident. Keep text messages, schedules, photos, and notes.
  5. Avoid broad statements before getting advice. Do not speculate about fault, sign a release, or give a recorded statement to another company’s insurer before you understand your rights.
  6. Keep medical and wage records. Save discharge papers, work notes, imaging orders, prescriptions, bills, mileage, pay stubs, union records, and written work restrictions.

Fast action matters because construction sites change every day. A scaffold can be dismantled, a trench filled, a floor opening covered, a machine repaired, or a subcontractor moved before anyone outside the company documents what happened. Early legal involvement helps preserve the evidence needed for both workers’ compensation and third-party claims.

Evidence That Can Prove Fault in a Construction Injury Case

Construction accident cases are evidence-driven. The question is not only that an injury occurred, but how the work was organized, what safety devices were provided, who controlled the hazard, what rules applied, and whether a violation caused the harm. The evidence can be spread across several companies, which is why preservation letters and early investigation are important.

Evidence CategoryWhy It MattersExamples
Site conditionsShows what the worker faced at the time of injuryPhotographs, video, measurements, weather records, lighting, floor openings, debris, scaffold setup
Project documentsIdentifies who controlled the work and safety responsibilitiesContracts, subcontracts, safety plans, daily logs, job hazard analyses, site maps, permits
Safety recordsShows whether hazards were known or rules were followedTool-box talks, inspection sheets, OSHA materials, incident reports, prior complaints, violation notices
Equipment recordsExplains whether a tool, lift, scaffold, crane, ladder, or machine was safeRental paperwork, maintenance logs, repair history, manuals, inspection tags, manufacturer warnings
Medical and wage proofDocuments the harm caused by the accidentEmergency records, imaging, specialist notes, therapy records, work restrictions, pay records, tax records

Some cases also require expert review. A construction safety expert may evaluate fall protection, scaffold assembly, excavation safety, demolition sequencing, or Industrial Code issues. An engineer may inspect a failed machine or structure. Medical, vocational, and economic experts may be needed when the injury causes permanent restrictions or changes the worker’s ability to earn a living.

Who May Be Responsible for a Construction Accident?

Construction accident liability often depends on the contracts and the actual job-site conduct. A company can have responsibility because it owned the property, served as the general contractor, supervised part of the work, supplied unsafe equipment, created the hazard, or failed to follow a specific safety rule. Identifying every responsible party matters because each may control different records, witnesses, insurance coverage, and defenses.

Potential PartyPossible Role in the CaseRecords to Review
Property ownerMay have legal duties tied to the site, contracts, or dangerous property conditionsOwner contracts, leases, inspection records, notices, project correspondence
General contractor or construction managerMay control coordination, safety rules, sequencing, inspections, and subcontractor activityPrime contract, site safety plan, daily reports, meeting notes, subcontractor logs
SubcontractorMay create or control the specific hazard that caused the injurySubcontract, work orders, employee lists, tool-box talks, equipment records
Equipment company or manufacturerMay be involved when a ladder, lift, saw, harness, scaffold part, or machine failedRental agreement, maintenance logs, manuals, warnings, recall records, inspection tags
Public entityMay be involved when the project is public work or the hazard is tied to a public roadway or propertyNotice records, contract package, plans, permits, inspection logs, traffic control documents

Common Injuries in Syracuse Construction Accident Cases

Construction injuries can be severe because workers may be exposed to heights, heavy materials, machinery, electricity, traffic, and unstable structures. We handle cases involving traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, fractures, crush injuries, amputations, burns, eye injuries, hearing loss, shoulder and knee injuries, respiratory injuries, and permanent disability. Fatal construction accidents may also support wrongful death and survival claims.

A serious injury claim should account for more than the first emergency bill. The evidence may include surgery needs, future medical care, rehabilitation, medications, pain management, mobility limits, psychological effects, home modifications, job restrictions, retraining, lost income, and the ways the injury changed family life. Claims involving brain injuries, burn injuries, spinal injuries, limb loss, or permanent work restrictions require careful medical documentation before an insurer can fairly evaluate the case.

How a Construction Accident Claim Is Evaluated

There is no reliable value for a construction accident case without reviewing the evidence. The starting point is liability. A claim is stronger when the evidence clearly shows that a safety device was missing, an Industrial Code rule applied, a contractor controlled the hazard, a piece of equipment failed, or a public project created an unsafe condition. A claim is harder when key evidence is missing, witnesses disagree, the hazard was repaired before anyone documented it, or the defense can plausibly argue that another company controlled the work.

The next issue is injury proof. Medical records must explain what happened to the body, what treatment was necessary, what future care may be needed, and how the injury affects work and daily life. Lost income evidence may include pay records, union records, tax documents, work restrictions, vocational analysis, and proof that the worker cannot return to the same trade or schedule. The case may also involve pain, loss of enjoyment of life, scarring, mobility limits, psychological effects, and the impact on family responsibilities.

Insurance coverage and defendant identity also matter. A serious injury on a site with multiple contractors may involve several policies, while a smaller job may have limited coverage or disputed employment relationships. We avoid settlement charts and promises because they can mislead injured workers. The better approach is to build the liability record, document the medical picture, identify every responsible party, and evaluate the claim only after the important facts are known.

How Construction Companies and Insurers Defend These Claims

Construction defendants often defend claims by arguing that the injured worker caused the accident, that the worker ignored available safety equipment, that another contractor controlled the hazard, that the property owner had no authority over the work, or that the injury was caused by a pre-existing condition. In cases involving workers’ compensation and a third-party claim, each insurer may try to point responsibility elsewhere.

These defenses are answered with evidence. Site photographs can show whether protection was actually available. Contracts can show who had safety authority. Daily reports can show who was working in the area. Inspection records can show whether equipment was checked. Witness testimony can explain how the work was directed. Medical records can connect the accident to the injury and document why treatment was necessary. The earlier those records are preserved, the harder it is for the defense to control the story.

What to Expect During a Syracuse Construction Accident Case

Every case follows its own path, but serious construction accident claims usually begin with immediate investigation and medical documentation. Our team identifies the employer, property owner, general contractor, construction manager, subcontractors, equipment vendors, insurance contacts, and any public entity tied to the project. We request incident reports, preserve photographs and video, review workers’ compensation filings, collect medical records, and determine whether the facts support a third-party lawsuit.

The next stage is liability and damages development. A case should not be valued before the injury picture is clear and the responsible parties are identified. We review how the project was organized, which safety rules applied, whether proper equipment was provided, whether a specific Industrial Code rule may support a Labor Law claim, and whether expert review is needed. At the same time, we track treatment, work restrictions, lost income, and the practical ways the injury affects daily life.

Some claims can be presented to insurers once the evidence is developed. Others require litigation in Onondaga County Supreme Court or another proper venue before defendants produce the contracts, logs, inspection records, and testimony needed to prove responsibility. Litigation may include written discovery, depositions, expert disclosures, court conferences, mediation, and trial preparation. Porter Law Group prepares serious construction cases with the expectation that the proof may need to be presented in court.

Related Construction, Workplace, and Injury Resources

Construction accident cases often overlap with other areas of personal injury law. A fall on a job site may involve premises liability principles. A failed ladder, lift, harness, or saw may involve product liability. A delivery truck or work-zone vehicle may create issues similar to truck accident or car accident claims. When an accident involves road work, the I-81 project, or another public project, municipal and state notice rules may also matter.

For more background, read our guides on contractor construction safety obligations, lawsuits after construction accidents in New York, injuries caused by falling objects, OSHA’s Fatal Four construction hazards, construction accidents caused by improper training, and Schedule Loss of Use awards in New York workplace cases.

Mistakes to Avoid After a Construction Site Injury

The period after a construction injury is stressful, and it is easy to make decisions before you know the full legal picture. One common mistake is assuming workers’ compensation is the only available claim. It may be one claim, but a separate third-party case may exist if a property owner, contractor, equipment company, or other non-employer party contributed to the accident.

Another mistake is waiting to document the site. Construction conditions change quickly. The scaffold, ladder, trench, machine, wiring, or floor opening involved in the incident may look different the next day. Delays can make it harder to prove what equipment was available, what warning signs existed, and who controlled the area.

Injured workers should also avoid signing releases, broad medical authorizations, settlement papers, or written statements before understanding what those documents do. Some forms may affect workers’ compensation benefits, third-party claims, medical privacy, or future rights. A Syracuse construction accident lawyer can review the documents, explain the effect, and help you avoid giving up rights before the claim is ready to evaluate.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to file a construction accident lawsuit in Syracuse?

Most New York personal injury lawsuits must be filed within three years of the injury under CPLR 214. Shorter deadlines can apply if the accident involved the City of Syracuse, Onondaga County, a school district, a public authority, or New York State. A Notice of Claim may be due within 90 days in some public-entity cases. Workers’ compensation also has separate reporting requirements, so it is important to get advice quickly.

Can I file a lawsuit if I am receiving workers’ compensation?

Yes, in some cases. Workers’ compensation usually provides benefits through your employer’s insurance system and generally prevents a direct lawsuit against your own employer for the same injury. A separate third-party lawsuit may exist if a property owner, general contractor, subcontractor, equipment company, driver, or another non-employer party contributed to the accident.

What is New York’s Scaffold Law?

New York Labor Law Section 240, commonly called the Scaffold Law, applies to certain elevation-related construction risks. It can apply when a worker falls from a height or is injured by a falling object because proper protection was not provided. Whether it applies depends on the work being performed, the equipment involved, the parties responsible, and how the accident happened.

Who can be liable for a Syracuse construction accident?

Potentially responsible parties may include the property owner, general contractor, construction manager, subcontractor, equipment manufacturer, rental company, maintenance contractor, material supplier, negligent driver, or a public entity tied to the project. Each party may control different records and insurance coverage. A lawyer investigates the contracts, site control, safety responsibilities, and accident facts before identifying claims.

What evidence matters after a construction site injury?

Important evidence can include site photographs, video, incident reports, OSHA materials, contracts, safety plans, daily logs, inspection records, equipment maintenance records, training records, witness statements, medical records, and wage documentation. Because construction sites change quickly, evidence should be preserved as soon as possible after the accident.

Can I still bring a claim if someone says the accident was my fault?

Do not assume the claim is over because a supervisor, contractor, or insurer blames you. New York law has specific rules for construction cases, and comparative fault depends on the type of claim and the evidence. Site conditions, safety equipment, witness accounts, contracts, and Labor Law issues may change the analysis.

How much is my construction accident case worth?

There is no reliable case value without reviewing the facts. Value depends on injury severity, medical treatment, future care needs, work restrictions, lost income, pain and suffering, liability proof, insurance coverage, and whether a third-party claim exists. Be cautious of settlement charts or promises. A lawyer can evaluate the case after reviewing the accident facts, medical records, and available evidence.

How much does a Syracuse construction accident lawyer cost?

Porter Law Group handles Syracuse construction accident cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing upfront and nothing unless we win your case, and initial consultations are free.

Syracuse, Onondaga County, and Statewide Service Area

Porter Law Group represents construction accident victims throughout the City of Syracuse and Onondaga County, including Downtown, Eastwood, Strathmore, Tipperary Hill, University Hill, Liverpool, Cicero, DeWitt, Camillus, Manlius, Solvay, North Syracuse, Baldwinsville, Fayetteville, East Syracuse, and nearby communities. We also serve families across New York State from offices throughout New York State including Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, Saratoga Springs, and New York City.

Visit our Syracuse, NY location page or browse our statewide offices. We also handle related claims through our Syracuse personal injury lawyers, Syracuse wrongful death lawyers, burn injury lawyers, brain injury lawyers, and premises liability lawyers. Read more on the Porter Law Group blog.

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We work on a contingency fee basis, nothing upfront and nothing unless we win.

Contact Syracuse Construction Accident Lawyers

If you or a loved one was injured on a construction site in Syracuse or anywhere in Central New York, contact Porter Law Group for a free, no-obligation consultation. We will review what happened, explain the deadlines that may apply, and discuss the evidence that should be preserved right away.

Call 833-PORTER9 or email info@porterlawteam.com. Our Syracuse office can help coordinate your consultation, and hospital or home visits may be available when injuries make travel difficult. We handle construction accident cases on a contingency fee basis, so there is nothing upfront and nothing unless we win.

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