A Tight Squeeze at the Upper Bluff Historic District
We got a call from a renovation crew working on a 1920s brick building in the Upper Bluff Historic District. Their dumpster from a big national company was stuck – the truck couldn't turn around on the narrow, one-way street lined with historic oaks. I remember the foreman's voice over the phone, frustrated because his crew was standing around, and the demo debris was piling up by the hour, threatening their tight project timeline.
Our crew dispatched a smaller, more maneuverable truck with a rear-steer axle, the kind we keep for these historic neighborhoods. The driver, who's worked Joliet's older districts for years, backed it down that tight street without touching a curb. We swapped their full container for an empty one right in front of the bay doors. The crew was back to work, hauling out plaster and lath, within 45 minutes of our arrival.
Your driver knew exactly how to thread that truck down our street when no one else could.
Project Foreman, Upper Bluff Renovation
