Signature Series cold drinking water station rental on a West Henderson Nevada jobsite

Water Station Rentals Henderson

Henderson’s local source for cold drinking water station rentals, dispatched same-day from our North Las Vegas yard about 25 minutes up the 215.

A Mojave afternoon in Henderson can run past 110 degrees with single-digit humidity, and that combination empties a crew quietly. Nobody feels soaked because the sweat is gone before it shows, so people drink half of what they need and don’t notice until somebody goes down. That gap is the whole reason this service exists. We get cold, filtered water onto your Henderson site fast, whether it’s a West Henderson industrial pad, a Water Street festival, or a Lake Las Vegas wedding. No warm bottle pallets baking in the sun. No 5 a.m. run to restock the cooler.

Run Out of North Las Vegas, On Henderson Jobs Same-Day

Our Nevada yard sits in North Las Vegas, roughly 20 to 25 miles from Henderson, so this is genuinely our backyard. The people who pick up your call and pull the trailer onto your site live in this valley and run it every week. They know the 215 beltway, the West Henderson industrial corridor off St. Rose and Volunteer, the Water Street District downtown, and the climb out to Lake Las Vegas. A Henderson drop is a routine same-day run for us, not a long-haul favor squeezed in from out of state. We’re close, we know the city, and the map below is ground our drivers cover on a normal Tuesday.

Why Henderson Books Us First for Water Station Rentals

On a Henderson jobsite or at a Henderson event, we’re the name people reach for when the heat turns serious. We earned that and we plan to keep it. Everything that’s made this company the preferred rental outfit in Southern Nevada carries straight onto a Henderson job, tuned for the one task that matters here: cold, clean water within arm’s reach of crews and crowds working a 110-degree Mojave afternoon.

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A+ BBB Accredited

We carry an A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau and a stack of five-star reviews behind it. Put a Henderson job in our hands and you're trusting a company whose record is already proven, not a gamble on an unknown.

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A Yard in the Valley, Plus a Western Network

Our North Las Vegas yard sits about 25 minutes from most of Henderson, and behind it runs a network of yards across Nevada, California, Utah and Arizona. A same-day drop on a Henderson site is the norm, and we can surge extra units in fast when a job grows.

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A Live Person, Any Hour

Dispatch, support, and scheduling run 24/7. So when a unit has to move at 4 a.m. on a graveyard pour, or a refill can't wait, you reach somebody who can actually fix it instead of a recording and a callback tomorrow.

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Two Generations in the Event-Rental Trade

Renting gear for events and jobsites is the family business, and has been for two generations. That history is why we spot where a Henderson job can go sideways, the bad access road, the underpowered circuit, before it actually does.

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A Big Fleet With a Local's Attention

You get the depth and reliability of a large operation and the hands-on care of the neighbor down the street. Scale when a data-center build needs it, real accountability when a single wedding can't go wrong.

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Our Trailers, Our People, Our Name on It

We don't broker your job out to a third party. The stations are ours and the drivers are our employees, so when something matters, the company you called is the company standing on your Henderson site.

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Licensed, Insured, DOT-Compliant

You're covered whatever the day brings. We hold full licensing and insurance, run DOT-compliant on the road, and issue a Certificate of Insurance to whatever a Henderson venue, GC, or the city requires.

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Trusted by the Toughest Buyers

Corporate clients, government agencies, municipalities, and school districts already choose us. When the buyers with the strictest vendor-approval rules sign off, that vetting work is done on your behalf.

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American-Built for Desert Abuse

Every station is made in the USA to hold up. No backyard rigs, no plans pulled off YouTube, nothing crated in from overseas, just equipment engineered to keep pouring cold in Mojave heat.

Introducing the Signature Series, Our Premier Cold Water Bottle Filling Station

Signature Series cold drinking water station rental parked at a West Henderson Nevada industrial jobsite

The Signature Series® is our premier cold water bottle filling station, and it’s the entire focus of what we rent. One purpose-built rig, engineered for exactly the Mojave heat Henderson throws at it: four push-back taps, a 300-gallon insulated tank, an in-line chiller that holds water at drinking temperature when the ambient air is sitting at 100°F, and multi-stage filtration that strips the hard-mineral taste Colorado River water carries. It tows in, levels on uneven or unpaved ground, and runs self-contained on shore power or a small generator. That’s what lets it work a raw West Henderson pad, a Water Street load-in, or a Lake Las Vegas lawn with the same ease.

Setup is quick. We back it in, level it on whatever surface you’ve got, then either tie into a hose bib or let it run straight off the onboard tank. A few minutes later it’s pouring. Your people pull cold water from four taps all shift while we handle the refills and the haul-off, so the water side of the job stops being something you have to think about until the trailer leaves.

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

Who Counts on Our Henderson Hydration Stations

A West Henderson manufacturing pad and a Water Street street festival have almost nothing in common except the desert heat, the dry air, and the need for cold water people will actually drink. That single shared need is the entire business. The same mobile drinking water station answers a Haas Automation build, a Henderson Pavilion concert, and a youth tournament at Lake Las Vegas without changing a thing about the equipment. Here are the Henderson situations we get called for most, and what the unit does in each.

West Henderson Manufacturing

Haas Automation's 2.4-million-square-foot CNC plant off the 215 is a $327 million build running hundreds of trades through 2026, much of it on open slab in full sun. We stage chilled water per work zone and refill on a route so a crew of that size never has to walk to the gate for a drink.

Google & Valley Data Centers

Google's $600 million data-center campus on West Warm Springs Road, and the wave of server builds chasing it, put concrete, electrical, and mechanical crews on exposed exurban pads for months at a stretch. A chilled station staged per zone keeps a large field crew hydrated where no retail water exists yet.

Warehouse & Logistics

The Amazon fulfillment center, the FedEx hub, the Levi Strauss facility, and the cold-storage operations along West Henderson run un-conditioned dock doors and high-bay space that bakes through summer. That indoor heat is squarely what Nevada's new heat rule covers, and we stage stations at dock faces and staging lanes.

Master-Planned Community Build-Out

Cadence, Inspirada, and the southern Henderson foothills are some of the top-selling master plans in the country, which means framing, roofing, and concrete crews working open lots all summer. Rooftop work is the hottest exposure on any site, and a cold station beats the heat downtown bottled water never solves.

Henderson Pavilion Concerts

The Henderson Pavilion is the largest amphitheater of its kind in Nevada at 2,500 seats, with a concert season that runs through the hot months on open-air lawn. We distribute refill points across the grounds and at the entry queues so the lines never stack up in the sun before the show.

Water Street District Festivals

The Water Street Plaza and the surrounding downtown district host street festivals, watch parties, and community events on open hardscape next to City Hall and Lifeguard Arena. We stage hydration stations at the festival footprint and stage areas where the crowd, and the radiant heat off the pavement, actually collect.

Lake Las Vegas Events & Weddings

The 320-acre lake hosts weddings, corporate retreats, paddle events, and resort functions out past the 215 climb. An elegant chilled station serves a few hundred guests through cocktail hour and a ceremony without a single plastic bottle cluttering the shots or the lawn.

Youth & Tournament Sports

Henderson's parks, the Lake Las Vegas Sports Club, and venues like Chicken N Pickle with its twelve courts run weekend tournaments that put kids and families on exposed fields and courts for hours. Distributed water points keep teams, refs, and spectators ahead of the heat between matches.

Raiders & Pro Sports Facilities

The Raiders' 330,000-square-foot headquarters and Intermountain Health Performance Center sits on 30 acres in Henderson with three outdoor fields. Outdoor practice, events, and the construction that keeps expanding the campus all run in real Mojave heat where cold water staged field-side matters.

UDOT-Style Roadwork & the 215

Beltway widening, interchange work, and the road program feeding Henderson's growth put paving and grading crews on hot asphalt across shifting work zones. A relocatable chilled station follows the work front instead of forcing a quarter-mile walk back to a truck for warm water.

Henderson Executive Airport & Aviation

Henderson Executive Airport and the hangar and FBO work around West Henderson put ground crews and contractors on open ramp and apron in direct sun. We stage a self-contained station ramp-side where shade is scarce and a fixed water line isn't where the work is.

Film & Commercial Production

Southern Nevada's production scene shoots the Henderson foothills, the lake, and the surrounding desert, much of it well off any tap. A self-contained 300-gallon chilled tank stands up a base camp with zero hookup, keeping catering, talent, and crew watered on a remote location.

Disaster Response & Cooling Centers

Henderson and Clark County open cooling stations during extreme-heat stretches, and those events surge demand past what fixed plumbing was built for. The self-contained tank backs up a center at capacity or supplies a wildfire or emergency staging area when municipal water is stretched thin.

Government & Institutional Work

City of Henderson projects, school district sites, and federal facilities around the valley put field crews and event staff out where a tap isn't handy. We hold active SAM.gov registration, so we can bid public work the day a Henderson or Clark County solicitation posts.

Henderson, Neighborhood by Neighborhood

Henderson isn’t one job. The raw industrial flats out west run a different heat and a different dispatch than the established neighborhoods around Green Valley, the foothill master plans climbing toward Black Mountain, or the resort grounds out at the lake. Each corner drinks a little differently and reaches a little differently from our North Las Vegas yard. Here’s how we read each one.

West Henderson Industrial

Haas Commerce Center · St. Rose Parkway · Volunteer Boulevard · West Warm Springs · Henderson Executive Airport

The Microclimate

Wide-open Mojave flats near 2,000 feet with zero mature shade and miles of exposed slab and asphalt that throw radiant heat back up at a crew well into the evening. Summer afternoons sit past 105°F routinely, and the dry air hides the fluid loss until somebody stumbles.

Where It Is Needed

The Haas Automation manufacturing plant, the Google data center on West Warm Springs, the Amazon and FedEx logistics hubs, cold-storage and food-production facilities, the Las Vegas Raiders headquarters campus, and the airport and FBO ramps.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

This is heavy jobsite country. We stage a chilled station per active work zone and reposition it as the pour or the pad moves, run a refill route built around the headcount, and bring a generator when the power on a raw pad isn't there yet. Most West Henderson drops land same-day from our yard.

Green Valley & Central Henderson

Green Valley · Green Valley Ranch · The District · Water Street District · Whitney Ranch

The Microclimate

The established heart of the city near 1,900 feet, denser and a little more sheltered than the western flats but still running full Mojave summer heat in the 100s. The hardscape downtown around Water Street and the open lots between built-out neighborhoods hold heat through the afternoon.

Where It Is Needed

The Water Street Plaza and downtown festival district, Lifeguard Arena and its plaza events, the Henderson Pavilion concert season, The District at Green Valley Ranch, and the steady infill construction across central Henderson.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

We cover both sides here. For events we distribute refill points across festival footprints and entry queues so the lines disappear. For the infill and renovation work, we drop a station on the lot and keep it serviced. Short hop from the yard, easy same-day turnaround.

Anthem, Inspirada & the Foothills

Anthem · Anthem Country Club · Inspirada · Cadence · Ascaya · MacDonald Highlands

The Microclimate

The master-planned foothills climbing toward Black Mountain, where elevation rises and the terrain gets steeper but the summer sun is just as punishing on an open lot. Anthem alone spans 4,755 acres and Inspirada another 2,000, so the active construction jobsite front is enormous and exposed.

Where It Is Needed

The Cadence, Inspirada, and Anthem build-out, foothill custom-home construction in Ascaya and MacDonald Highlands, community parks and pools, and the new-urbanism village squares and event spaces these master plans are known for.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

Greenfield and rooftop work dominates up here, often before plumbing reaches the lot. Self-contained operation is the point: we bring the water and the power, stage on raw pads, and move the unit uphill with the framing and roofing crews as the subdivision fills in.

Lake Las Vegas & the Eastern Edge

Lake Las Vegas · SouthShore · Del Webb at Lake Las Vegas · the Lake Mead gateway

The Microclimate

Resort country out past the eastern beltway, built around a 320-acre man-made lake, where the surrounding desert can run hotter than the rest of the city and the access pushes drive time out a bit. Open lawns, lakeside terraces, and exposed event sites all bake under the same Mojave sun.

Where It Is Needed

Lake Las Vegas weddings and resort functions, SouthShore and Del Webb community events, paddle and water-sport gatherings on the lake, corporate retreats, and the desert sites along the road toward Lake Mead.

How the Signature Series Fills the Need

This end is mostly events and resort work where presentation counts. We bring a clean, chilled station that serves a crowd through a long outdoor afternoon, refill against the run-of-show, and handle the extra drive time as part of the plan rather than a surprise.

What We've Learned Running Water in Henderson Heat

A lot of what makes a Henderson rental go right never shows up on a spec sheet. It's the stuff our dispatchers and drivers have picked up over years of running this valley, and it's worth sharing because it changes how you should plan the job.

Dry heat lies, so we plan for the number you can't feel

Henderson runs single-digit-to-low humidity through the summer, and that's the trap. Sweat evaporates the instant it surfaces, so a worker never feels wet and badly under-drinks. We've watched crews start dragging at 'only' 102 degrees because the dry air hid how much they'd already lost. So we size water for the real fluid loss in low humidity, not for how hot it merely feels. Every job.

On West Henderson pads, placement beats unit count

The most common mistake we see out on the industrial flats is one station parked at the gate. On a Haas-scale plant or a data-center pad our drivers stage a unit per active zone and walk it with the pour. A crew that has to hike a couple hundred yards across hot slab for water simply drinks less, and on a 110-degree afternoon that's the gap that turns into a heat call.

We deliver around the Henderson clock, not against it

Summer crews here start early to beat the worst of it, so we drop the unit the evening before and have it cold at first light. For Water Street festivals and Lake Las Vegas events we stage ahead of doors and top off before the hottest stretch, because in this valley the dangerous window is the whole back half of the afternoon, not one peak hour on a chart.

Colorado River water is hard, and hard water gets ignored

Henderson's supply comes almost entirely from the Colorado River through the Southern Nevada Water Authority, and it carries a mineral edge people taste. Warm, hard tap water is water a crew or a crowd walks past. We run every drop through multi-stage on-board filtration and serve it cold, because the only water that does any good is the water people actually drink.

We refill against the shift, never against a dry tank

On a long West Henderson rotation a hot crew can pull a full 300-gallon tank down well before the shift ends, so we don't wait for it to run empty. We've learned to time a top-off into the rotation, usually mid-shift, so the swing and graveyard crews get the same cold water the day shift had. The gap that hurts somebody is always the one nobody scheduled around.

We walk the access before we promise the trailer

Plenty of Henderson's trickier deliveries aren't about heat at all, they're about getting a tow rig and trailer onto a half-built foothill lot or a soft, unpaved pad and back out clean. Before we commit to an Anthem hillside or a raw West Henderson site, the driver checks the road, the turnaround, and the ground. We've saved more than one job by spotting a soft shoulder that would've stranded the unit when the crew needed it most.

What Henderson Crews and Planners Tell Us

★★★★★

We had trades spread across a huge slab out west during a July stretch in the 110s and our bottled-water setup was warm and gone by mid-morning. I called and they had a Signature Series on site that afternoon, then added a second unit so each zone had its own. It basically wrote the water half of our heat plan for us.

Greg Mathison, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer
Greg Mathison
Project Superintendent, national general contractor (West Henderson manufacturing build)
★★★★★

Our downtown festival had thousands of people on open pavement near Water Street and the old water points were a chokepoint. They staged multiple stations across the footprint and the lines just vanished. Cold water, no drama, and somebody actually answered every call during build week.

Renee Caldwell, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer
Renee Caldwell
Events Director, Henderson event production company
★★★★★

We host a lot of summer ceremonies out by the lake and guests dressed up in that heat go down faster than people expect. Their station looked clean enough to sit right in our cocktail area and kept a few hundred people cold all evening. We book them every season now.

Victor Salas, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer
Victor Salas
Site Manager, Lake Las Vegas resort wedding venue
★★★★★

Weekend tournaments at our complex run all day in full sun and we were burning through cases of warm bottles. They dropped two stations near the fields, refilled between rounds, and the kids and parents finally had cold water within reach. Setup took minutes and they were local enough to actually show up.

Dana Whitfield, verified On-Site Hydration Services customer
Dana Whitfield
Operations Lead, Henderson youth sports tournament

Get Cold Water on Your Henderson Site This Week

Whether you need water station rentals for an event, a hydration station for a jobsite, or a bottle filling station for a tournament, tell us the location, the dates, and the headcount. From our North Las Vegas yard a same-day or same-week Henderson delivery is routine, and your quote includes the Nevada water-per-worker capacity math. We answer 24/7.

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

Everything to Know Before You Rent in Henderson

The deeper detail, sorted so you open only what you need: the heat science behind why this matters, Nevada’s heat rule and what it now requires, where the water comes from and how we filter it, and the sustainability case in a valley living on Lake Mead. This is the knowledge base behind being the most informed water-station partner working Henderson.

Henderson sits at roughly 1,330 feet on the floor of the Mojave, and summer here is no joke. July average highs run past 100°F, with stretches of 110°F to 117°F during the heatwaves that hit the Las Vegas Valley most years. The 2024 summer was one of the deadliest on record in Clark County, with hundreds of heat-related deaths across the valley, and outdoor and warehouse workers sit right in the path of that risk.

What the thermometer hides is what makes it dangerous. Henderson’s humidity drops into the single digits through the worst of summer, so sweat flashes off the skin instantly. A worker never feels soaked and chronically under-drinks because the body’s usual warning, that drenched feeling, never arrives. From there dehydration moves quickly, through fatigue and slipping judgment to heat exhaustion, and once the body stops sweating, to heat stroke. Cold water genuinely within reach is the single most effective way to keep a crew or a crowd ahead of that curve, which is exactly what a chilled, filtered station staged at the work zone delivers.

Nevada now has a real, enforceable heat-illness regulation, and Henderson employers are on the hook for it. Nevada OSHA adopted regulation R131-24AP on November 15, 2024, and active enforcement began April 29, 2025. It applies to most employers with more than 10 employees under Nevada OSHA’s jurisdiction and covers both outdoor and indoor heat exposure, which pulls those un-conditioned West Henderson warehouses and dock spaces squarely under it.

The rule requires a job hazard analysis, a written heat-illness safety program, and on the ground it mandates the provision of potable water, rest breaks for anyone showing symptoms, and a means of cooling workers. On a ‘heat priority day,’ when the temperature hits or passes 90°F, Nevada OSHA steps up outreach and will inspect any heat-related complaint, fatality, or referral regardless of industry. Federal OSHA’s water-rest-shade guidance still sets the working benchmark of about one quart of cool water per worker per hour, and a federal heat rule is in rulemaking on top of it. A chilled, filtered station staged at the work zone is the cleanest way to meet Nevada’s standing requirement and the federal benchmark at once, and our quotes run the capacity math for you.

We fill from tested, potable municipal sources, then push every drop through multi-stage on-board filtration, sediment, carbon, and a fine final filter, before it ever reaches the tap. Henderson and the rest of Southern Nevada draw roughly 90 percent of their supply from the Colorado River through Lake Mead, delivered by the Southern Nevada Water Authority. That water is hard and mineral-heavy, and that mineral taste is exactly what keeps people from drinking enough on a hot jobsite or at an event. The on-board filtration strips it out and the chiller serves the water cold, and that combination is what actually gets crews and crowds to hydrate instead of walk past the cooler.

Southern Nevada runs on the tightest water budget in the country. Lake Mead, the source behind almost all of Henderson’s water, has fallen more than 150 feet since 2000 and triggered the first-ever federal Colorado River shortage declaration in 2021. The City of Henderson has earned national recognition for water conservation, and reducing single-use-plastic waste sits right alongside that effort for the events and public agencies measured on it.

At event scale the disposable-bottle stream piles up fast: a Water Street festival or a Pavilion concert can push thousands of plastic bottles toward a landfill in a single weekend. A refillable chilled station flips that, serving colder water with almost no waste. On the jobsite side, ending the truck-in, truck-out grind of bottled water on a remote West Henderson pad is a small, visible win that also leaves the crew better hydrated than the warm cases ever did.

Your Henderson Rental Questions, Answered

We stage a chilled station per active work zone and walk it with the crew instead of parking one unit at the gate. On a Haas Automation-scale plant or an Amazon, FedEx, or Levi Strauss dock, that means cold water within arm’s reach at the slab and the dock faces, not a couple hundred yards across hot pavement. Then we run a refill route built around your headcount so the swing and graveyard crews get the same cold water the day shift had.

That’s a big part of what we do here. These are some of the top-selling master plans in the country, with framing, roofing, and concrete crews working open lots all summer before plumbing reaches the pad. We bring the water and the power, stage on raw ground, and move the unit uphill with the crews as the subdivision fills in. Rooftop work is the hottest exposure on any site, and that’s exactly where a cold station earns its keep.

Regularly. The city parks, the Lake Las Vegas Sports Club, and venues like Chicken N Pickle run all-day tournaments that put kids, refs, and families on exposed fields and courts for hours. We drop distributed water points near the fields and refill between rounds, so teams and spectators stay ahead of the heat instead of burning through warm cases. Setup takes minutes and we’re local enough to actually show up on a Saturday.

Yes. Out by the 320-acre lake we bring a clean, chilled station polished enough to sit right in a cocktail area, and it serves a few hundred dressed-up guests cold water through a long outdoor afternoon without a single plastic bottle cluttering the shots or the lawn. We refill against your run-of-show and plan the extra drive time out past the 215 climb as part of the job, not a surprise.

Our Nevada yard sits in North Las Vegas, roughly 20 to 25 miles from most of Henderson and about 25 minutes up the 215, so this is genuinely our backyard. The people who pick up your call and tow the trailer in live in this valley and run it every week. A Henderson drop is a routine same-day run, not a long-haul favor squeezed in from another state.

That’s the whole design. The 300-gallon tank shows up full and cold and runs self-contained, and where shore power isn’t on the pad yet we add a right-sized generator to keep the chiller going. We get onto raw industrial slabs off St. Rose and Volunteer, half-built foothill lots in Ascaya and MacDonald Highlands, and remote desert sites well before any water line reaches them. The driver walks the access road and turnaround first so a soft shoulder never strands the unit.

It does, and that’s the part a lot of operators miss. Nevada OSHA’s regulation R131-24AP covers indoor heat exposure, not just outdoor, so an un-conditioned dock door or high-bay space along West Henderson in summer is squarely in scope. We stage stations at dock faces and staging lanes where that indoor heat actually builds, so the cold water is right where the crew is working.

It’s real and it’s enforced. R131-24AP took effect with active enforcement starting April 29, 2025, and applies to most employers over 10 people under Nevada OSHA. It mandates a written heat-illness program, potable water, rest breaks, and a means of cooling, and on a heat-priority day at or past 90 degrees the agency steps up inspections. A chilled, accessible station is a direct way to meet the water requirement, and our quotes run the capacity math for you.

The working benchmark is at least one quart of cool water per worker per hour, roughly two gallons over an eight-hour shift and closer to three on a long industrial shift in real Mojave heat. Our 300-gallon tank covers a large crew through a shift at that rate, and we run the headcount-times-hours math when we quote a West Henderson or data-center job.

Yes. The in-line chiller and insulated tank are specified for Mojave summer, so the water holds drinking temperature at the tap even with the ambient air past 100 degrees and the unit sitting in direct sun. That matters more here than almost anywhere: Henderson’s single-digit humidity hides fluid loss, and cold water gets consumed while warm water gets walked past.

All the time. Google’s data-center campus, large manufacturing pads, and downtown festivals near the Water Street District often run several stations at once. It’s the same equipment and terms multiplied by the count, with a refill route built around your headcount and footprint. For a Pavilion concert or a street festival we distribute refill points across the grounds and entry queues so the lines never stack up in the sun.

As a planning figure we budget roughly half a liter to a liter of drinking water per attendee for a multi-hour outdoor event, and a single four-tap unit can’t move that volume alone at that crowd size. For 1,000 people across a Water Street footprint or a Pavilion lawn we usually distribute two to four stations so nobody waits in a line in the sun, then schedule refills against your run-of-show. We size the exact count from your peak crowd and footprint.

Lead time helps most in the busy stretches: peak-summer construction on the master plans, the Water Street and Henderson Pavilion event seasons, and the big tournament weekends out at Lake Las Vegas all fill the calendar first. A smaller event or a same-week jobsite drop we can usually turn fast from the North Las Vegas yard. Send the dates and the location and we’ll confirm what’s open.

Send the dates, the location, and the headcount. We back the unit in and level it on whatever ground you’ve got, whether that’s a raw foothill lot or a downtown hardscape, tie it to a hose bib or run it off the onboard tank, and it’s pouring within minutes. We handle refills on a schedule and come haul it off at the end of the window. Your team never touches the equipment.

Absolutely, and most of our industrial and master-plan work is exactly that. We rent by the week and by the month for multi-month GC schedules, keep the same unit on site for the duration, and run a regular service and refill route. Running concurrent Henderson sites across, say, a West Henderson pad and an Inspirada subdivision? We’ll put them on one contract with one point of contact.

A water buffalo is a towable tank and a cooler is a small dispenser, and neither is built for desert throughput. The Signature Series pairs a 300-gallon tank with active in-line refrigeration, multi-stage filtration that strips the hard-mineral taste Colorado River water carries, and four push-back taps at once. So a Haas crew or a Lake Las Vegas crowd pulls cold, clean, filtered water instead of warm tank water or a single slow spout. It’s purpose-built for high-throughput potable hydration in Mojave heat.

Henderson 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, a same-day or same-week delivery is routine, whether it's a Lake Las Vegas wedding, a six-month West Henderson manufacturing build, or a Water Street festival. Tell us where the job is, the rental window, and roughly how many people the unit needs to serve, and we'll come back with a quote that includes the Nevada water-per-worker capacity math, the delivery schedule, and any generator or accessory recommendations for your site. Call (866) 748-5932 today, or use the form on this page.

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