Zero Trip Hazard Fence Stands for Safer Temporary Fence Lines
After the hard winter rains hit Lincoln, I saw how fast erosion can turn a normal fence line into a stumble point. Around Lincoln Meadows, the ground softened up, edges washed out, and a stand with a proud foot or a loose base started causing problems where people were walking every day. We built our zero trip hazard fence stands to keep that lower edge cleaner and flatter, especially near active paths, loading spots, and neighborhood access points like Lincoln Crossing Marketplace. Our crew pairs them with chain-link panels, checks the base contact, and locks the run down before traffic starts moving. When the site gets windy or the soil stays wet, we lean on modular reconfiguration and wind load resistance so the fence holds its line without turning the walkway into a hazard. We get it up fast, no excuses.
- We set zero trip hazard stands where crews need a flatter path for walkers, carts, and wheelbarrows around the work zone.
- We match stands to chain-link panels so the fence stays steady without creating a raised lip at the base.
- We use concrete steel bases and interlocking hooks when the ground is soft or the layout shifts fast.
- We protect walk-through areas near Old Town Residential, Lincoln Meadows, and Teal Hollow with clean, low-profile setups.
- We stay ready for the weather and call for wind load resistance and fence blow over prevention when open ground starts moving.