A business owner — or their contractor, or their restoration company — calls because the bathrooms are offline. Sometimes it's planned: a full remodel that's been on the calendar for months. Sometimes it's not: a pipe burst, a flood, mold found behind the walls, a sewer backup that shut everything down overnight.
Either way, the problem is the same. Employees are showing up. The business is open or needs to stay open. And there are no functioning restrooms.
That's what a restroom trailer solves.
Across the Sacramento region we've placed trailers for a wide range of small and mid-size businesses during remodels and emergencies:
The common thread isn't the industry — it's the situation. Employees need facilities, the business can't shut down, and the remodel or repair needs to run its course. Most of these deployments run one to three months. Some are shorter for emergency situations. All of them connect directly to the building's existing power and water — no generator, no tank management.
Most first-time callers have the same three questions. Here are straight answers:
Usually we connect directly to what you already have — a standard exterior outlet and a water connection near the building. No generator noise, no tank refilling. Simple.
It depends on how many people are using it and what their hours are. A small office with ten employees during business hours only needs very different service than a forty-person operation. We look at actual usage and set a schedule that fits — not a fixed interval that may be more frequent than your situation warrants.
Most commercial parking lots can take a restroom trailer in one or two standard parking spaces. We back it in close to the building entrance, connect power and water, and it's ready. On office complexes and multi-tenant properties we've done this dozens of times — it's a routine placement, not a production.
Not every call is planned. Floods happen. Mold gets discovered during a renovation and the scope doubles overnight. A plumbing failure backs up the entire system and suddenly there are no usable bathrooms in the building.
These situations are urgent. A business with forty employees and no working restrooms can't wait a week. We treat emergency calls accordingly — assess the site, confirm logistics, and get a unit placed as quickly as the situation requires.
If you're in that situation right now, call directly. Don't fill out a form.
Not usually. On most small and mid-size business deployments, the trailer connects directly to the building's existing shore power and water. No generator, no tank management — just a connection to what's already there.
It depends on usage — how many people, what hours, what days. We assess your situation and set a schedule that matches actual need. A small office during business hours only needs very different service than a larger operation running extended hours. We don't over-service just to pad a schedule.
Yes. Not every deployment is planned. When bathrooms go offline unexpectedly, we can move quickly. If you're in that situation right now, call directly — 916-538-9044. Don't fill out a form.
Most small business remodels run one to three months. Emergency situations can be shorter. Longer deployments happen when scope expands or when a project is waiting on permits, contractors, or materials.
Usually yes. Most commercial parking lots can accommodate a trailer in one or two standard parking spaces, backed in close to the building entrance. Tight office complexes are common — we've done it many times and it's a routine placement.
Either works. Some deployments come through a general contractor or restoration company. Others are direct calls from the business owner. Either way, you're talking to the owner — not a dispatcher. If you have a question about whether a trailer will work for your situation, just call and ask.
Whether it's a planned remodel or an overnight plumbing disaster, we can get a trailer on your site and your employees taken care of. Call Ron directly — no forms, no callbacks, straight answers.
916-538-9044