Keeping roll-offs moving on the Belcher Road Corridor
We got called to a commercial strip off the Belcher Road Corridor after a roof tear-out filled the back lot with wet shingles, nails, and broken decking. The morning air had that sharp storm smell, and our crew had to thread a truck past parked fleet vans, delivery traffic, and a tight service lane without blocking the dock doors. The property manager needed the container placed where workers could load fast, but the pavement couldn’t take a sloppy drop. If we missed the angle or sat too close to traffic, the whole cleanup would stall and the site would lose its rhythm.
We spotted the turning path first, then set the dumpster with the truck kept straight and the wheels clear of the soft edge. Our driver used the spotter while we checked overhead clearance, because one bad swing around power lines or box trucks turns a simple swap into a mess. We also left room for forklifts to pass and kept the gate line open for the next trailer. That setup let the crew keep tossing debris without waiting on us, and the manager told us the lot stayed usable the whole day.
You parked it exactly where we needed it, and our crew never lost a minute.
Marcus T.
