Keeping a rehab moving near the Towson Branch library
On a cool morning off the older brick streets near the Baltimore County Public Library, our crew rolled up to a rehab where demo debris had already started stacking beside the curb. The property sat in that 1920-1950 Towson Manor Village mix of tight drives, mature trees, and narrow access, so every missed haul would’ve blocked workers, irritated neighbors, and slowed inspections. We could see plaster, old framing, and broken flooring piling up fast, and the contractor needed the site clear before the next crew showed up. If we’d let that waste sit, the whole schedule would’ve slipped.
We brought in a low-profile container, set it where the truck could get out clean, and kept the load plan tight so the crew didn’t waste steps. We always place dumpsters this way in Towson Manor Village because those older lots leave little room to maneuver, and we don’t want to tear up lawns or block a shared drive. Our driver stayed in touch, swapped the box once it filled, and kept the demo zone open for the next trade. By the afternoon, the contractor had room to work and the job kept moving without the usual pileup.
We never lost a day to trash buildup, and that kept our rehab right on schedule.
Evan R.

