On-Site Hydration Services Signature Series cold water station close-up for Nevada rentals

Water Station Rentals Nevada

Nevada’s preferred, locally operated source for cold drinking water station rentals, run out of our own yard right here in North Las Vegas.

When the desert turns brutal and your crew, your crowd, or your jobsite still needs to drink, we are the name Nevada calls first. We live and work here, we stage trailers across the state, and we dispatch cold filtered water fast, 24 hours a day. No bottles to babysit, no coolers going warm by lunch, no scramble at 6 a.m.

Headquartered in North Las Vegas, Serving Every Corner of Nevada

Our Nevada hub sits in North Las Vegas, and the people who answer your call and pull up to your site live in this valley. They know its job sites, its venues, and which back roads actually get a trailer where it needs to go. This is not a company servicing Nevada from another state on paper. We are physically here, we understand this market better than anyone, and the map below is the ground our crews cover every week.

Nevada Trusts Us First for Water Station Rentals, and Here Is Why

Make no mistake: when it comes to keeping people hydrated on a Nevada job site or at a Nevada event, we are the state’s go-to provider, and we intend to stay that way. Everything that has made our company the preferred name in rentals applies here, sharpened for the specific job of getting cold, clean water to crews and crowds in desert heat.

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A+ BBB Accredited

A spotless A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau and thousands of 5-star reviews. When you hand a Nevada job to us, you are handing it to a company with a documented track record, not a gamble.

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West Coast Yard Network

Strategically placed yards across California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and beyond let us dispatch trailers immediately and rapidly deploy across the Western United States. In the Las Vegas metro, that often means a unit on site within 45 minutes.

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24/7 Availability, Dispatch & Support

Around-the-clock availability, around-the-clock dispatch, and around-the-clock customer service. If anything ever comes up on your site, we respond right away, and a real person always answers the phone.

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Two Generations of Event-Rental Heritage

This business is in our blood. Two generations of a family-run event-rental company means we understand the events landscape, and the stakes of a job going sideways, better than anyone in the space.

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Big-Company Capability, Small-Business Care

We are a large operation, but we treat every customer the way a small local outfit would. You get the scale and reliability of a major company with the attention and accountability of a neighbor.

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We Own Our Units and Hire Our Own Staff

We are a fully self-operating company, not a reseller and not a third-party broker. The trailers are ours, the crews are ours, and the accountability stops with us. You deal with the company that actually delivers.

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Fully Licensed and Insured

All the licensing and insurance you need to be protected no matter what happens, including full DOT compliance. We provide Certificates of Insurance for any event or rental type your venue or GC requires.

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The Preferred Choice of Corporate America

Corporate America, government agencies, municipalities, and school districts choose us as their number one rental provider. The organizations with the strictest vendor standards already trust us.

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Made-in-USA, Heavy-Duty Units

Our stations are built in the USA to stand the test of time. These are not DIY units, not builds from YouTube plans, and not products ordered from overseas. They are durable, purpose-engineered equipment.

Meet the Signature Series, the Only Unit Built for This

Signature Series cold drinking water station rental parked at a Las Vegas Nevada jobsite in desert heat

The Signature Series® Cold Drinking Water Station is what we do. Single piece of equipment, engineered for the Mojave and the Great Basin: four push-back taps, a 300-gallon insulated tank, an in-line chiller that holds water at drinking temperature when ambient is 110°F, and multi-stage filtration that strips the hard-mineral taste Nevada water carries. It tows in, levels on uneven or unpaved ground, and runs self-contained on shore power or a small generator, which is what lets it work a dry lakebed film set, a remote solar field, or a 40-story Strip tower deck with equal ease.

Here is what that looks like on your site. We tow it in, level it on whatever ground you have, paved or not, and either tie into a hose bib or run it straight off the onboard tank. Setup takes minutes. Your crew pulls cold water from four taps all day, and we handle the refills and the pickup. Nobody on your team has to think about water again until the job wraps.

SpecValue
No. of Stations(4) Bottle Filling Stations
Length12′ 3″
Weight3,100 lbs.
Height8′
Fresh Water Tank300 Gallons
Power Requirements1-3 dedicated 20A/120V circuits OR 1 dedicated 50A/240V circuit
No. of AC Units1

Every Nevada Industry and Event We Keep Hydrated

The same trailer answers very different jobs across Nevada. A Strip convention load-in and a graveyard shift on the Carlin Trend have almost nothing in common except the heat and the need for cold water that is actually reachable. Here are fourteen of the situations we get called for most, and what the unit does in each.

Convention & Trade-Show Load-In

The air-conditioned hall is fine. The danger is the outdoor load-in, the marshaling yards, and the demo lots where crews work asphalt that radiates past 130°F for days before doors open at the LVCC, Venetian Expo, or Mandalay Bay. We stage at load-in gates and badge checkpoints where the lines form in open sun.

Outdoor Festivals & Concerts

EDC at the Motor Speedway runs roughly 175,000 a night dusk to dawn, and the late-morning exodus pushes into daytime heat. Distributed refill points across a sprawling infield keep dangerous bottlenecks from forming. Free water access is increasingly a permit and harm-reduction expectation for Nevada mass gatherings.

Strip Megaproject Construction

High-rise resort, arena, and ballpark sites put hundreds to thousands of trades on steel and concrete decks all summer. A single source at the gate does nothing for a crew twenty floors up, so we stage chilled water per floor and per zone and move it up with the build.

Brightline West & Linear Infrastructure

The high-speed rail line runs about 50 miles through Nevada along I-15, with crews moving daily down the railhead across open desert far from any town. The self-contained station follows the work front where trucking in warm cases would otherwise be the only option.

Utility-Scale Solar on BLM Desert

Projects like Gemini Solar spread hundreds of panel installers and electricians across thousands of remote Mojave acres with zero shade and zero infrastructure. The work front moves every day. A relocatable chilled station is the only model that keeps cold water close to a crew that dispersed.

Mining & Heavy Industry

The Carlin Trend gold complex near Elko runs around the clock on 10 to 12-hour shifts, crews dispersed across the pit, haul roads, and process areas in remote rural country. Bulk cold water staged at the pit rim beats running bottled water to scattered locations.

Data Centers & Warehouse Build-Out

The Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center and the Apex and North Las Vegas logistics corridors run greenfield civil and structural crews on exposed pads, plus dock and high-bay crews in space that bakes in summer. We stage at the work face and the dock door.

F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix Buildout

Race week is the easy part. The track build, grandstand assembly, and hospitality crews work the Strip corridor outdoors for weeks each November. We cover the build crews and the fan-zone footprint along the corridor.

Desert Endurance & Sporting Events

The Baker to Vegas relay runs 120 miles of open Mojave highway with exchange points in roadless desert. Strip marathons, the PGA Tour stop at TPC Summerlin, and youth tournaments all need densely spaced, high-throughput hydration that does not run out at mile nine.

Outdoor & Desert Weddings

Las Vegas issues more than 76,000 marriage licenses a year, many at outdoor and desert venues like Red Rock and Valley of Fire that put dressed-up guests in direct sun. An elegant station at cocktail hour serves a few hundred guests without any plastic-bottle clutter.

Film & TV Production

Nevada's film incentive keeps productions shooting dry lakebeds, mountain ranges, and the neon core, much of it far from any water tap. A self-contained 300-gallon chilled tank stands up a base camp with zero hookup for catering, talent, and crew.

Disaster Response & Cooling Centers

Clark County activates roughly 20 cooling stations during extreme-heat warnings, and the "code red" surge can outstrip fixed plumbing. The self-contained tank backs up a center at capacity or supplies a wildfire base camp where municipal water is down.

Government, Military & Federal Sites

Nellis and Creech, the Nevada Test and Training Range, and vast BLM land put field exercises and land-management crews far from any tap. We hold active SAM.gov registration, so we can bid and respond the day a federal solicitation posts.

Schools, Universities & Civic Events

UNLV and UNR run move-in days, gameday tailgates, commencement, and outdoor events that pull thousands onto open lots and quads with no plumbed water point. We cover the surge that fixed indoor fountains cannot reach.

Nevada Regions We Serve

Nevada is two deserts and four very different operating environments. We route every rental against the heat, elevation, and distance of the specific region it is headed to. Here is how each one works and what it needs.

Las Vegas Valley & the Mojave South

Las Vegas · Henderson · North Las Vegas · Boulder City

The Microclimate

The Mojave floor sits near 2,000 feet and holds 100°F or hotter for roughly four months a year. Las Vegas set an all-time record of 120°F in July 2024, ran 112 days over 100 that year, and carries the most intense urban heat island of any U.S. city, so even overnight lows barely break the high 70s. Clark County recorded 526 heat-related deaths in 2024. Single-digit humidity hides how fast the body is losing water.

Where It Is Needed

The densest demand in the state. Convention load-ins and outdoor demo lots at the Las Vegas Convention Center, Venetian Expo, and Mandalay Bay (CES, World of Concrete's outdoor Silver Lot, SEMA, MAGIC). EDC at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway draws roughly 175,000 a night, and the Las Vegas Festival Grounds host major desert festivals. Allegiant Stadium tailgates, the Formula 1 Strip-circuit buildout, Strip high-rise and ballpark megaprojects, TPC Summerlin golf galleries, and Red Rock and Valley of Fire desert weddings all bake in the same heat.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

We stage cold water at load-in gates and marshaling yards, distribute low-line refill points across festival infields, run chilled water per floor up Strip towers, and drop stations in tailgate lots and at desert ceremony sites. With our hub in North Las Vegas, coverage reaches Henderson and most valley jobs within 45 minutes.

Colorado River Corridor

Laughlin · Mesquite

The Microclimate

The hottest ground in the state. Laughlin sits at just 605 feet and holds Nevada's all-time record of 125°F, and the river canyon traps heat so the corridor routinely runs hotter than Las Vegas. Mesquite, on the Arizona-Utah line, lives in the same Mojave-edge extreme.

Where It Is Needed

Riverfront resort and casino operations, outdoor river events and regattas, golf tournaments and resort weddings in Mesquite, and regional festivals that run straight through triple-digit afternoons.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

This corridor demands the most aggressive hydration coverage anywhere in Nevada. Our chilled units, which bring their own water and power, hold drinking temperature even when the trailer has baked in 120-degree river-canyon sun all day, and they reach remote riverfront staging where no water line runs.

Reno-Sparks & the Great Basin North

Reno · Sparks · Carson City

The Microclimate

High desert near 4,500 feet, where July highs sit in the mid-90s but the air swings nearly 30 degrees colder by night. The thin, dry air adds respiratory water loss on top of the heat, and late-summer wildfire smoke stacks respiratory stress on outdoor crews and crowds.

Where It Is Needed

The Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center data-center and manufacturing build-out (the largest industrial park in the world), the Sparks logistics and warehouse boom, construction jobsites across the valley, Reno's heavy summer concert and festival calendar, University of Nevada, Reno move-in and athletics, and Carson City civic events.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

We stage chilled stations on exposed greenfield pads and at dock faces during build-out, and cover outdoor campus and civic events. Operating without a hookup matters here, because so much of the work happens on raw industrial land before any plumbing exists.

Rural & Mining Country

Elko · Ely · Winnemucca · Pahrump

The Microclimate

High Great Basin elevation from roughly 4,300 to 6,400 feet. Daytime heat is milder than the south, but altitude still accelerates water loss and the sites are remote, often dozens of miles from the nearest tap. The Humboldt River valleys add seasonal agricultural heat exposure.

Where It Is Needed

The Carlin Trend gold complex near Elko, the largest gold-producing operation in the world, anchors mining and aggregate operations that run 24/7 on 10 to 12-hour shifts. Utility-scale solar spreads crews across thousands of acres of open BLM desert, agriculture surges through Winnemucca and Fallon, and Pahrump adds solar and event demand an hour west of Las Vegas.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

This is the clearest case for delivered hydration that needs nothing from the site. We bring the tank, bring a generator if there is no shore power, and refill on the shift pattern, so a mine surface crew or a solar field with no water for miles still has cold water every rotation.

What We've Learned Keeping Nevada Hydrated

A lot of what makes a rental go right in Nevada is not on a spec sheet. It is the stuff our dispatchers and drivers have learned the hard way over years of running this state, and it is worth sharing because it changes how you should plan.

Where the unit actually goes matters more than how many you have

The most common mistake we see is water parked at the gate. We have found that on a Strip high-rise the only thing that works is staging a unit on the occupied decks and moving it up with the pour, because a crew twenty floors up will not climb down for water and will simply drink less. On a sprawling solar field or a lay-down yard, our drivers reposition the station with the work front each morning rather than leaving it where it landed on day one. Placement is the difference between a unit that gets used and one that gets ignored.

We size to the shift, then add margin for the Mojave

When a planner asks how much they need, we do not guess. We size to roughly a quart per person per hour across the shift length, then add headroom because desert heat pushes sweat rates past the textbook number. A 40-person crew on a 10-hour July shift will pull close to a full 300-gallon tank, so we schedule a midday refill rather than gamble on a dry tap at 2 p.m., which is the hottest and most dangerous part of a Nevada afternoon.

We plan around the Nevada calendar, not against it

We have run enough summers here to deliver around them. Crews on summer hours start at 6 a.m., so we drop the unit the evening before instead of racing the sunrise. For dusk-to-dawn events like EDC we stage overnight and top off at first light, before the morning exodus turns into the hottest, thirstiest stretch of the whole festival.

Up north, cold and dust are the variables nobody warns you about

Reno, Carson City, and Elko flip the problem. Our crews winterize units for the high desert with insulated jacketing and heat tape so they keep running when overnight lows drop below freezing. Dust is the other northern reality: on mine and solar deployments our drivers service the chiller intake filter during longer runs so the cold output never quietly falls off mid-contract. These are the details that separate a vendor who has actually worked Nevada from one servicing it on paper.

Nevada Crews and Planners Who Counted on Us

★★★★★

We had 80-plus trades on the deck during a July heat wave and our bottled-water plan fell apart by 10 a.m. I called in the morning, they had a Signature Series on site that afternoon, and we never had a heat-related slowdown again. Their unit basically wrote the water half of our heat-illness plan for us.

Tom Jackson, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer in Nevada
Tom Jackson
Project Superintendent, national general contractor (five-star Strip hotel build)
★★★★★

Our festival grounds had thousands of people in the sun and the lines at our old water points were dangerous. They staged multiple stations across the infield and the bottlenecks disappeared overnight. Cold water, zero drama, and they answered every late-night call during build week.

Lilly Johnson, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer in Nevada
Lilly Johnson
Operations Director, Las Vegas festival production company
★★★★★

Our panel crews were spread over hundreds of acres of open desert with no water for miles. They delivered a self-contained unit, brought a generator, and moved it with the work front. It is the only reason we kept the crew hydrated that far off the grid.

Marcus Reed, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer in Nevada
Marcus Reed
Site Manager, northern Nevada solar contractor
★★★★★

For our outdoor move-in and gameday events, they showed up clean, set up in minutes, and the cold filtered water was a hit with families and staff. Easy to work with, local, and genuinely cared that everything went right. We book them every season now.

Danielle Cortez, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer in Nevada
Danielle Cortez
Event Coordinator, Clark County school district

Get Cold Water on Your Nevada Site This Week

Tell us where the job is, your dates, and how many people the unit needs to serve. From our North Las Vegas yard we can usually confirm a same-week delivery, and your quote includes the R131-24AP capacity math. We answer 24/7.

📞 Call Now (866) 748-5932Request a Quote

The Nevada Water Station Rental Reference Library

The deeper detail, organized so you can open only what you need: the heat science, the compliance law, the water itself, and the sustainability case. This is the knowledge base behind being the most informed water-station partner operating in Nevada.

Start with the conditions. Nevada is the driest state in the country and one of the fastest-warming, and Las Vegas alone holds at 100°F or hotter for roughly four months, set an all-time record of 120°F in July 2024, and lost 526 people to heat in Clark County that same year. Layer on two separate deserts, a convention and event calendar that never empties, and a construction and mining base that works straight through August, and the conclusion writes itself: out here, accessible cold water is a safety control rather than a perk. The figures below show why a single product had to be built for it.

2.3MLas Vegas Metro Pop
3.2MNevada Population
110,572Sq Mi Statewide
120°FLV Record High, Jul 2024
526Clark Co. Heat Deaths 2024

Why does heat hit harder here than almost anywhere else? Two reasons the thermometer hides. First, humidity. At the single-digit to low-teens relative humidity Nevada runs in summer, sweat evaporates the instant it reaches the skin, so a person never feels wet and badly underestimates the loss, which can reach one to two liters an hour in full sun. Thirst lags far behind the real deficit, which is why crews go down without warning. Second, elevation. Much of northern and rural Nevada works between 4,300 and 6,400 feet, where thinner, drier air roughly doubles the water lost through breathing before anyone breaks a sweat. From there, dehydration moves fast: fatigue, headache, and clouded judgment, then heat exhaustion, and once sweating stops, heat stroke. Cold water that is genuinely within reach, not a quarter mile away and not lukewarm, is the single most effective way to keep a crew or a crowd ahead of that curve.

In late 2024 Nevada put a binding heat-illness standard on the books, R131-24AP, and Nevada OSHA has been enforcing it since April 2025. It reaches any employer with more than 10 workers, applies indoors and outdoors, and switches on the moment most of a crew is exposed to heat illness for more than 30 minutes in any hour. Once it does, you owe a written prevention program, and the very first item the rule names is providing potable water. That single line is why a jobsite hydration plan is no longer optional in this state, and it sits behind every construction, mining, and industrial rental described here.

Water Can Pass the Audit on Paper and Still Never Reach the Crew Cold water that lives at the site entrance does nothing for a crew working a deck twenty floors up or a face a quarter mile out across a lay-down yard. The federal benchmark is one quart of suitably cool water per worker per hour, kept as close as practicable to the work, and warm jugs baking by the gate satisfy neither half of that. A chilled station staged where the crew actually stands is the version that holds up to an inspector and, more important, to a 110-degree afternoon.

The rule names water. Best practice and the federal standard define how much and how cold. Nevada’s rule mandates potable water but does not, on its own, dictate quantity or temperature. The federal OSHA water-rest-shade benchmark fills that gap at roughly one quart per worker per hour, which is about two gallons over an eight-hour shift and closer to three over a 12-hour mining shift. A single 300-gallon station covers a large crew through a shift, and we size the unit count and refill cadence to your numbers so supply never runs short mid-rotation.

Construction and mining math: a heat-illness citation is an expensive way to learn this. For GCs on a Strip megaproject, contractors on Brightline West, or operators across the Carlin Trend, a documented water plan is cheap compared to a citation or, worse, an incident. Our quote gives your safety manager the capacity math and the equipment documentation that an inspector wants to see, staged where the crew works rather than where a water line happens to run.

When Help Is an Hour Away, Hydration Is the Control You Actually Hold On a solar field out on BLM land, a mine surface crew, or a Brightline West railhead, the nearest ambulance is not five minutes out the way it is downtown. That distance changes the math. The realistic way to keep a hot afternoon from turning into a medical call miles from anywhere is to make sure nobody slides into heat illness in the first place, and steady, easy access to cold water is the front-line piece of that. A self-contained station on site is the simplest form it takes.

We fill from tested, potable municipal sources, then run every drop through multi-stage on-board filtration, sediment, carbon, and a fine final filter, before it reaches the tap. Most of southern Nevada’s supply comes from the Colorado River and Lake Mead through the Southern Nevada Water Authority, while the north leans on Truckee River and groundwater sources, so quality varies by district. On-board filtration gives a consistent, clean-tasting result no matter where we fill, which is part of why crews and crowds actually drink it.

Southern Nevada runs on a tight water budget. As Lake Mead and the wider Colorado River system have dropped, the Southern Nevada Water Authority has pushed two decades of hard conservation, and single-use plastic now sits squarely inside the sustainability goals that events and public agencies across the state are measured against.

At event scale the disposable-bottle stream gets ugly fast. A festival the size of EDC or a multi-day convention can move tens of thousands of plastic bottles toward a landfill in a single weekend. A refillable chilled station flips that, serving colder water and almost no waste at once, which is exactly the combination civic, resort, and brand-conscious organizers are now expected to deliver.

On the jobsite side, environmental reporting has become part of how big Nevada projects get permitted and tracked. Taking the recurring truck-in, truck-out cycle of bottled water off a remote site is a small, visible win, and it happens to leave the crew better hydrated than the cases ever did.

Put plainly: bottled water means packaging trucked in, stacked in the sun until it is warm, and hauled back out as trash, week after week. One station that tops off from any spigot on site retires that whole loop, and the water reaches the crew cold instead of lukewarm.

Nevada Water Station Rentals: The Questions We Hear Most

All 110,572 square miles of it. Southern Nevada runs off our North Las Vegas yard, which keeps the Las Vegas Valley, Henderson, Laughlin, Mesquite, Boulder City, and Pahrump on short-notice delivery. Northern Nevada gets served on scheduled routes that reach Reno, Sparks, Carson City, Elko, Winnemucca, and the rural mining and ranch country in between. If your site has an address or a set of coordinates in this state, we have a way to reach it.

Same Signature Series everywhere. The refrigeration loop holds drinking temperature whether the unit lands at 2,000 feet in 110°F Las Vegas air or at 5,000 feet in the high desert near Elko, because the chiller runs on shore power or a small generator regardless of elevation. One spec sheet covers a Mojave festival in the south and a Great Basin mine site in the north.

That is the case for using us instead of a local one-yard outfit. A contractor with a Strip high-rise and an Elko pit, or a logistics group building in both Apex and the Tahoe-Reno corridor, gets one vendor, one rate structure, and one point of contact across the state line that splits Nevada in half. Most regional suppliers stop at the edge of their valley. We do not.

Yes, and that is how most of our multi-site customers run. Concurrent jobsites, a chain of event dates, or a portfolio of construction projects can all live on one contract with one invoice and one service route rather than a separate vendor relationship per city. It is the cleaner way to manage hydration across a footprint that crosses the whole state.

Nevada adopted regulation R131-24AP on November 15, 2024, and began enforcing it on April 29, 2025, and it applies to indoor and outdoor work across the state, not just the Las Vegas Valley. The rule names potable water as a required element of the written heat-illness program for crews with heat exposure. A chilled, filtered station staged at the work zone documents that requirement, and every quote we send runs the capacity math against your headcount and shift length.

Past the pavement. The 300-gallon tank arrives filled and chilled, runs self-contained, and pairs with a small generator sized to the chiller when there is no shore power, so the lack of a tap or a power drop is not the limit. We reach utility-scale solar fields on open BLM acreage, the Carlin Trend mine surface, Brightline West work fronts strung along I-15, and federal land where the nearest hydrant is an hour off. We hold active SAM.gov registration for the government and base work that sits in those same remote zones.

It changes the capacity math, not the equipment. Laughlin on the Colorado River set the state record of 125°F and routinely runs hotter than the Strip, while the northern high desert swings hard between a hot afternoon and a cold night. Hotter ground and longer exposure mean crews drink more per hour, so we size the tank count and refill schedule to the climate band your site sits in rather than handing you a one-size number.

The spread is wide because the state’s work is. Convention and trade-show load-in and the F1 buildout in Las Vegas, festival and wedding crowds valley-wide, Strip megaproject and Brightline West construction, utility-scale solar and the around-the-clock gold mining of the north, the Tahoe-Reno and Apex data-center and warehouse boom, film production on remote lakebeds, and county cooling-center backup during heat warnings. The same unit covers all of it.

It depends on where in the state and when. A southern Nevada drop near the North Las Vegas yard can turn around fast, while a remote northern site on a scheduled route wants more notice. Peak windows fill first, so flag a summer mining deployment, a major convention week, or an EDC-season event early. Give us the dates and the location and we will tell you straight what is open.

Usually, once you count the hidden costs. Pricing is built per project on three inputs, the headcount served, the duration, and the distance to site, so a multi-city customer gets consistent math instead of a different local markup in every market. Rolling several Nevada locations onto one contract also retires the bottled-water cycle at each one, the cost, the waste, and the labor of hauling cases into remote sites. Tell us the sites and we return a quote with the R131-24AP capacity figures built in.

Yes, regardless of which corner of the state it lands in. We fill from tested, potable municipal sources and run every drop through multi-stage on-board filtration before it reaches the tap, so a unit on a rural mine site delivers the same clean, filtered water as one at a Las Vegas convention. Filtration also strips the hard-mineral taste, which matters in a state this dry. The full source-and-filtration detail sits in the reference library above.

The distance is on us, not you. You give us the dates, the location, and the headcount or crowd size. We tow the unit in, level it on whatever ground the site has, paved or not, and either connect it to a hose bib or water buffalo on site or run it off the on-board tank with scheduled refills when there is no hookup. Setup takes minutes, and when the window ends we haul it out. You never touch the equipment, and a remote northern site is handled the same as one across town.

Yes, and that is the bulk of our mining, data-center, and infrastructure work. We rent by the week and by the month for multi-month general-contractor schedules, leave the same unit on site for the duration, and run a regular service-and-refill route to it even when it is deep in rural country. A 90-day deployment on an Elko-area mine site is routine, not an exception.

Two reasons that both get sharper the farther you are from a store. Cold water gets consumed and warm water gets ignored, so in Nevada heat the temperature at the tap decides whether a crew actually hydrates. And a refillable station ends the logistics of trucking cases of bottles to a site that is an hour past the last gas station. One station replaces a standing pallet order and the labor that comes with it.

A water buffalo is a towable tank with no refrigeration, and an office cooler is a small indoor dispenser. Neither holds drinking temperature for a crowd in 115°F sun. The Signature Series pairs tank-scale capacity with active in-line chilling, multi-stage filtration, and four push-back taps running at once, so it serves cold, clean water to a crew or a crowd instead of warm tank water from a single slow spout. It is purpose-built for high-throughput potable hydration in the kind of heat this state produces.

Nevada is core service territory for us. From our North Las Vegas yard, and a Western U.S. network of yards across California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona, we can usually confirm a same-week delivery for anything from a Friday wedding at a Red Rock venue to a 90-day deployment on a Strip high-rise or a remote solar field. Tell us where the job is, what the rental window looks like, and roughly how many people the unit needs to serve. We will come back with a quote that includes the R131-24AP capacity math, the delivery schedule, and any generator or accessory recommendations based on what your site has and does not have. If it is a multi-site contract across the valley, we wrap it into one paperwork package. Either way, the trailer will be where you need it, pouring cold filtered water from the first hour of the rental window to the last. Call (866) 748-5932 today, or use the form on this page.

Hours
Mon-Fri 7am-6pm PT
24/7 emergency dispatch

Mon-Fri 6a-7p  ·  Sat 7a-5p  ·  Sun by appointment  ·  24/7 emergency dispatch for Cal Fire and active incident response  ·  Cal Fire certified  ·  SAM.gov registered  ·  A+ BBB accredited

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