After that big storm in 2007, I kept seeing the same problem across Greenwood: job sites that had been tidy one day were left open the next, with mud, debris, and damaged panels everywhere. That was the moment Maria and I knew temporary fence had to move fast and had to hold up when the weather turned ugly. We started County Line Fence Rental in 2008 with that exact lesson in mind. When a contractor calls us now, we’re thinking about the same things we saw back then: where the wind’s pushing, where foot traffic cuts through, and how to keep a site closed before anything gets walked off or blown loose.
We work all over Greenwood, from Old Town Greenwood and Forest Park to Greenwood Trace, the Madison Avenue Corridor, and the Greenwood Park Mall Area. Those neighborhoods look different on the map, but the fence problems stay pretty familiar. Around older homes and remodels, we’ll usually see tighter driveways and less room for staging, so we set panels carefully and keep access where the crew actually needs it. In the faster-growing pockets near Valle Vista, Barrington, and The Legends, we’re usually working around new builds, utility work, or a remodel with a lot of material coming and going. That’s where you want fence that goes up clean, stays tight, and doesn’t become one more thing your crew has to babysit.
We also plan for Greenwood weather, because it matters more than folks think. We deal with 13 days above 90F, a long stretch of cooling demand, and enough freeze days to make frozen ground a real headache in winter. On hot afternoons, we’re thinking about heat, shimmer, and tired crews moving around loose job sites. On colder mornings, we’ve got to deal with hard ground and metal that gets cold fast. And when the rain starts stacking up, even in a low flood zone, we still watch drainage and soft shoulders so the fence doesn’t settle crooked. That’s the kind of field judgment you only get by hauling panels in mud and setting post after post when the conditions aren’t ideal.
Here’s what we bring to the work:
- Temporary fence rental for construction sites, event perimeters, and property protection
- Careful setup around entrances, equipment paths, and neighborhood access points
- Practical placement based on wind, surface conditions, and daily site traffic
- Hands-on oversight from Maria Garcia, an AFA Certified Fence Professional with OSHA 30-Hour Construction Safety training and a State Contractor License
We’re also familiar with event work around Freedom Springs Aquatics Park and the surrounding community spaces, where the fence has to do more than just stand there. It has to guide people, protect equipment, and keep a clean boundary that doesn’t make the place look half-finished. That’s why we pay attention to line tension, panel alignment, and gate placement instead of just dropping materials and walking away. Our crew wants the site to feel controlled from the first hour, because that’s what keeps the rest of the job moving.
If you’re in Greenwood and you need temporary fence rental from a crew that’s been through storm cleanup, busy build seasons, winter ground, and summer heat, we’ll get it up fast so you don’t have to worry. That’s been our approach since day one, and it’s still how we work every single day.