Hook Park retail strip needed clean pulls without blocking customer traffic
A property manager near Hook Park called us after a week of tenant turnovers stacked drywall, shelving, and broken fixtures behind a small retail row. The alley ran tight, and the morning heat was already building off the asphalt, so any bad placement would've pinned delivery vans and scared off customers. We saw the same problem a lot in Victorville after the market crash: quick cleanouts, limited room, and crews that couldn't afford a second trip. The stakes were simple — if we missed the access plan, the whole strip stayed messy and the afternoon freight run got jammed.
We rolled in with a smaller box first, then swapped to a larger container once the heavier debris started coming out. Our crew kept the rear doors angled away from the drive lane, laid down boards where the truck had to swing, and used the forklift pocket space with care so we didn't chew up the pavement. We worked around the customer flow instead of against it, and we kept the pickup path clear for vendors all day. By the end, the manager had a clean loading lane, tenants got back to business, and nobody lost a delivery window.
You kept our dock open and got the mess out without slowing our tenants down.
Marta L.
