Cement & Construction Truck Accident Lawyers — North Charleston
North Charleston’s rapid growth has made construction vehicles a constant presence on local roads. Cement mixers, dump trucks, flatbed carriers, and heavy equipment transporters travel between active development sites, concrete plants, and highway projects throughout the area. When these heavy, top-heavy vehicles crash or overturn, the results are devastating for passenger vehicles and pedestrians in their path.
Recent incidents underscore the danger: a cement truck overturned on Rivers Avenue in March 2025, shutting down lanes. A concrete truck drove off the I-26 overpass near Dorchester Road. These are not isolated events — they reflect the inherent hazards of heavy construction vehicles operating on roads alongside passenger traffic.
Why Construction Trucks Are Especially Dangerous
- High center of gravity: Cement mixers and loaded dump trucks are extremely top-heavy, making them prone to rollover on turns, curves, and uneven pavement
- Extreme weight: A fully loaded cement mixer weighs 60,000-70,000 pounds — enough to crush any passenger vehicle
- Liquid load dynamics: Wet concrete sloshes during turns and braking, shifting the vehicle’s center of gravity unpredictably
- Limited visibility: Large blind spots around the drum, hopper, and body make it difficult for operators to see adjacent vehicles, pedestrians, and cyclists
- Brake wear: Stop-and-go driving between job sites accelerates brake wear; many construction trucks operate with marginal braking capacity
- Road debris: Concrete spills, gravel, and unsecured materials falling from trucks create hazards for following vehicles
Common Construction Truck Crash Scenarios
Rollover Accidents
Cement mixers and dump trucks overturn when taking turns too fast, when liquid loads shift during braking, or when they encounter uneven road surfaces. Rollovers on multi-lane roads like Rivers Avenue can crush vehicles in adjacent lanes and spill thousands of pounds of concrete or aggregate across the roadway.
Rear-End Crashes
Construction trucks accelerate slowly and often travel well below the speed limit on arterial roads. Following vehicles may not anticipate the speed differential, especially when a truck is partially obscured by a curve or hill. The mass difference makes these rear-end crashes far more severe than car-on-car impacts.
Falling Material
Unsecured concrete, gravel, rebar, lumber, and construction debris falling from trucks strike windshields, cause evasive maneuvers, and damage vehicles. South Carolina law holds the truck operator and company strictly liable for unsecured cargo that causes injury.
Bridge and Overpass Strikes
Over-height construction vehicles striking bridges — like the concrete truck that went over the I-26 overpass near Dorchester Road — create sudden road blockages and potential structural damage. Following vehicles may crash into the stopped truck or falling debris.
Liable Parties
- The truck driver — for excessive speed on turns, failure to brake, or impaired/distracted driving
- The construction company — for overloading vehicles, inadequate driver training, or pressure to make too many trips per shift
- The concrete plant/supplier — for overloading the mixer beyond capacity
- The vehicle maintenance provider ��� for brake failures, tire blowouts, or hydraulic system malfunctions
- The general contractor — if site conditions or scheduling contributed to the dangerous operation
North Charleston Construction Truck Hotspots
- Rivers Avenue: Recurring cement truck rollovers, construction vehicle access to development sites
- Dorchester Road / I-26 overpass: Fatal truck incidents including overpass departure
- I-526 construction zone: Heavy equipment and material haulers in widening project work areas
- Park Circle area: Redevelopment projects generating cement and dump truck traffic on residential streets
- Navy Yard / Noisette: Ongoing redevelopment with constant heavy vehicle presence
Your Rights
If a construction truck injured you, South Carolina gives you 3 years to file a claim (S.C. Code § 15-3-530). These cases require prompt investigation — the truck must be inspected, maintenance records preserved, and loading records obtained before evidence is lost. Call Roden Law at (843) 612-6561.
