Maria Garcia started County Line Fence Rental in Greenwood back in 2008, and I remember exactly why she pushed to build it the way she did. A major storm had torn through the area in 2007, and the sites left behind told the whole story: loose panels, open perimeters, mud tracking across driveways, and crews trying to keep people out with whatever they had on hand. Maria saw that mess up close and knew this town needed a fence company that showed up ready, set the line fast, and kept people from worrying about what was still exposed.
We still work that way today. Our crew sizes up the ground first, because Greenwood isn’t one kind of job site. Around Old Town Greenwood, we’re often working tighter footprints with foot traffic nearby. Over in Forest Park and Greenwood Trace, we’ll deal with yard grades, landscaping, and homeowners who need the fence to sit clean without tearing up the place. Along the Madison Avenue Corridor and in Imperial Hills, we see longer runs, busier access points, and plenty of storm wear after wet weather. The city sits in a stretch that sees hot summer days, cold snaps, and enough freeze-thaw cycles to make weak installs shift if you rush them.
That’s why we lean on the right setup for the site instead of forcing one fix everywhere. We use emergency fencing when a site needs immediate control, and we’ll add temporary gates where crews and deliveries need clean access. For event work near Greenwood Trace or around Old Town Greenwood, we pay close attention to walk paths and crowd flow. If the wind starts cutting across an open lot near Imperial Hills, we choose materials that hold better instead of pretending every fence stands up the same way.
We get it up fast, so you don’t have to worry. That’s not a slogan around here. That’s how we work when a job needs to be secure before the next crew shows up, before an event crowd builds, or before weather turns a soft edge into a problem. Our certifications and safety training matter, but so does plain field sense: walk the site, read the ground, set the line, check the load points, and make sure the fence does what it’s there to do.
If you’re looking at a project near Forest Park, along the Madison Avenue Corridor, or anywhere else in Greenwood, we’ll bring the same approach Maria built from the start. We’ve spent years learning how local weather, busy neighborhoods, and changing jobsite conditions affect temporary fencing, and we’ve built our process around that reality.