West Jordan Water Station Rentals
Our Core Service Offering, We Are The Leading Provider of Cold Drinking Water Station Rentals Across West Jordan and the Salt Lake Valley
Thousands of 5-Star Reviews · 11,000+ Deliveries · A+ BBB Accredited · Cal Fire Certified · SAM.gov Registered · ISN Member Contractor · California HQ · 20+ Years Statewide

On-Site Hydration Services in West Jordan
On-Site Hydration Services provides drinking water station rentals across West Jordan and the wider Salt Lake Valley. From the Jordan Landing mixed-use district and the historic Copperton foothills to the warehouse corridors along Bangerter Highway and the master-planned communities of Welby, Copper Hills, and Jordan Hills, we deliver the Signature Series Cold Drinking Water Station throughout West Jordan and into the neighboring cities of West Valley City, Taylorsville, Murray, Midvale, Sandy, South Jordan, Riverton, and Herriman. Whether you are running a Frito-Lay production floor, staging the Western Stampede rodeo, supplying a distribution-center peak season, prepping a Mountain View Corridor roadwork crew, or opening a new subdivision in the Oquirrh foothills, On-Site Hydration Services has the equipment, the operators, and the dispatch infrastructure to get a station on site.
Here is why West Jordan operators rely on On-Site Hydration Services. We have earned thousands of verified 5-star reviews and completed 11,000+ deliveries with a documented zero-incident track record. We are A+ BBB accredited, SAM.gov registered for institutional and municipal procurement, an ISN Member Contractor, and Cal Fire certified for emergency response. Same-day delivery into West Jordan and Salt Lake County is standard, with 24/7 emergency dispatch during heat advisories and active incidents. Every driver who pulls a station to a West Jordan jobsite is a W-2 On-Site Hydration Services employee, on our insurance, with our safety training. We don’t broker, we don’t subcontract, and our quotes match our invoices.
24/7 Rapid Dispatch Available
Serving all of West Jordan and the Salt Lake Valley
From Jordan Landing and Copperton to West Valley City, Sandy, and South Jordan.
Phone: (866) 748-5932
Email: info@onsitehydrationservices.com
Hours: Mon-Fri 7am to 6pm MT
Emergency dispatch: 24/7 for declared incidents, heat advisories, and same-day vendor failures.
Thousands of 5-Star Reviews · 11,000+ Deliveries · A+ BBB Accredited · Cal Fire Certified · SAM.gov Registered · ISN Member Contractor · California HQ · 20+ Years Statewide

Introducing The Signature Series® for West Jordan
The Signature Series is a 300-gallon, four-tap, towable drinking water station built to make cold filtered water feel inevitable. Every trailer carries multi-stage filtration (sediment, carbon, polish), an in-line chiller stack that holds water at 38°F, sweat-resistant cabinet walls that don’t drip onto the slab, and four push-back spigots arranged so a line of people refills bottles without crowding. A 300-gallon tank does the work of roughly 2,400 single-use plastic bottles. On a four-day deployment with refill, one trailer can displace 20,000-plus bottles before it ever needs a swap. Here is what that looks like in three West Jordan scenarios we run all summer. A Frito-Lay production floor. Hundreds of food-production employees working an indoor process line where ambient heat climbs well past the thermostat reading by midshift. Two stations staged near the break areas so crews on rotation refill in under 11 seconds per bottle and nobody walks the floor dehydrated. A Western Stampede rodeo weekend. Thousands of spectators at the West Jordan Rodeo Grounds on a 96°F July afternoon, the high-desert sun beating down at 4,330 feet of elevation. Trailers staged near the grandstand and carnival midway at Veterans Memorial Park so the line for cold water never backs up against the food vendors. A Mountain View Corridor roadwork crew. The forecast says 98°F by 2 p.m., the crew has 14 workers on an open stretch of grading with no shade for a half mile. Station parked inside the cone-tapered work zone, water under 77°F, a quart per worker per hour, as close as practicable to the lay-down crew. The foreman documents the setup on his daily water-rest-shade log. The full spec sheet (tank dimensions, chiller capacity, filtration stages, tow weight, plumbing requirements) lives at the button below.
Signature Series® Specifications
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| No. of Stations | (4) Bottle Filling Stations |
| Length | 12' 3" |
| Weight | 3,100 lbs. |
| Height | 8' |
| Fresh Water Tank | 300 Gallons |
| Power Requirements | 1-3 dedicated 20A/120V circuits OR 1 dedicated 50A/240V circuit |
| No. of AC Units | 1 |
Inside the West Jordan Logistics and Industrial Market
West Jordan’s hydration market doesn’t look like anywhere else in Utah. You have the third-largest city in the state, a heavy warehouse-and-distribution footprint that makes the southwest Salt Lake Valley an Intermountain West logistics hub, a manufacturing base anchored by the Frito-Lay production plant and Quality Electrical Systems, one of Utah’s fastest-growing homebuilding pipelines, and a semi-arid high-desert climate that pushes July highs into the high-90s and low-100s with almost no humidity. The buyer mix here is unusual: plant facilities managers, distribution-center safety leads, master-planned community superintendents, and Western Stampede event organizers all rent from the same pool of stations.
Geography & High-Desert Heat
West Jordan sits at the southwest end of the Salt Lake Valley against the Oquirrh Mountains at roughly 4,330 feet. Summers are hot, dry, and mostly clear: July highs average 90-92°F and regularly reach the high-90s and low-100s, with humidity near its annual low of about 27 percent and roughly 13 hours of daily sun. The dry air and elevation drive evaporative water loss faster than the thermometer alone suggests.
Logistics & Distribution
The southwest Salt Lake Valley is a major Intermountain West distribution hub. West Jordan lists 500-plus warehouse, distribution, and fulfillment roles at a time. High-bay floors, dock yards, and trailer staging build indoor heat well past the outdoor reading on a summer afternoon, creating year-round demand for cold water on the floor.
Manufacturing & Food Production
A real industrial base anchors the city. The Frito-Lay production plant runs food-production process heat, and Quality Electrical Systems operates 350,000-plus square feet of electrical-equipment manufacturing. Both carry indoor heat exposure that is independent of the weather, which keeps crews supplied with cold water every shift.
Construction & Growth
West Jordan is one of Utah’s fastest-growing cities. The Mountain View Corridor freeway conversion brings new lanes and roughly 25 bridges. Master-planned communities including Oquirrh West, Dry Creek Highlands, and the Jordan Landing build-out keep grading and framing crews working open ground through the hottest months.
Events & Venues
The Western Stampede (July 2-4) brings a PRCA rodeo, parade, carnival, concert, drone show, and fireworks to the West Jordan Rodeo Grounds and Veterans Memorial Park. The West Jordan Arena hosts concerts and derbies, Jordan Landing runs large outdoor promotions, and Conservation Garden Park stages civic gatherings. Outdoor crowds sit in direct high-desert sun for hours.
Heat-Safety & Compliance
Utah Occupational Safety and Health (UOSH) lists heat illness prevention as a core service and centers guidance on water, rest, shade, acclimatization, and training. Federal OSHA’s proposed heat rule would trigger water-rest-shade near an 80°F heat index. Forward-looking employers follow the §3395 benchmark: one quart of cool water per worker per hour.
Why West Jordan Facility Managers and Contractors Pick Us
Thousands of 5-Star Reviews From West Jordan Customers
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A+ BBB Accredited, SAM.gov Registered for Institutional Procurement
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Fast Dispatch Across the Salt Lake Valley
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Same-Day Dispatch When a Heat Advisory Hits
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Built for the §3395 Benchmark on High-Desert Jobsites
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Trusted Across Manufacturing, Logistics, Construction, and Events
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In-House W-2 Crews, No Broker Shuffle
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Two-Plus Decades of Operations Pointed at the Salt Lake Valley
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West Jordan Job Sites and Events We Serve
Fourteen West Jordan scenarios. One Signature Series station. The job changes, the equipment doesn’t.
West Jordan Festival and Live Event Water Stations
West Jordan’s Western Stampede over July 2-4 is the city’s premier celebration: a PRCA rodeo, parade, carnival, concert, drone show, and fireworks drawing thousands into full high-desert sun. The West Jordan Arena runs concerts and demolition derbies. Jordan Landing hosts large outdoor commercial promotions. Conservation Garden Park and Veterans Memorial Park stage civic and cultural gatherings. Every one of these footprints needs cold drinking water staged where the crowd actually is, not at a single tent in the corner.
→ See West Jordan festival water station rentalsWest Jordan Construction Site Hydration
The Mountain View Corridor (SR-85) freeway conversion brings new lanes, roughly 25 bridges, and a multi-year crew footprint through West Jordan. Master-planned communities like Oquirrh West and Dry Creek Highlands keep grading and framing crews turning over month after month. The Jordan Landing build-out adds vertical and site work. These crews work open ground in 95-100°F July heat with no natural shade, exactly the conditions the water-rest-shade benchmark exists for. Our stations move with the work zone.
→ See West Jordan construction water station rentalsWest Jordan Warehouse and Distribution Hydration
The southwest Salt Lake Valley is a major Intermountain West distribution hub, and West Jordan lists 500-plus warehouse, distribution, and fulfillment roles at any given time. Dock yards, trailer staging, and high-bay floors build indoor heat well past the thermostat on a summer afternoon. We stage cold-water stations across the dock doors and break areas so peak-season crews refill in seconds and nobody walks the floor dehydrated.
→ See West Jordan warehouse water station rentalsWest Jordan Manufacturing and Food-Production Hydration
The Frito-Lay production plant and Quality Electrical Systems (350,000-plus square feet of manufacturing) anchor a real industrial base. Food-production and electrical-equipment floors carry process heat that runs year-round, independent of the weather outside. Plant facilities managers stage our stations near the line and the break rooms so the workforce stays supplied through every shift.
→ See West Jordan manufacturing water station rentalsWest Jordan Heat-Advisory and Emergency Hydration
When Salt Lake County issues an excessive-heat advisory, demand for cold water spikes across open jobsites, warehouse yards, and outdoor venues all at once. Summer days in the valley routinely cross 100°F with single-digit humidity. We hold a same-day window for exactly these calls: a warehouse whose cooling failed, a crew that lost its only water source, a venue that underestimated a hot-weekend crowd. Pre-filled, pre-chilled, on site fast.
→ See West Jordan emergency water station rentalsWest Jordan Marathon, 5K, and Race Event Hydration
The Salt Lake Valley hosts a full calendar of road races and charity 5Ks through spring and summer, many starting early to beat the high-desert heat before runners hit the open valley floor in full sun. Course directors stage our stations at the start, every few mile markers, and the finish. The push-back taps move a 1,000-person field through bottle fills faster than any cooler-and-cup setup.
→ See West Jordan race water station rentalsWest Jordan School and University Water Stations
Copper Hills High, the Jordan School District campuses, and the nearby Salt Lake Community College Jordan campus all run move-in weeks, tournaments, band camps, and graduations where hundreds of people are outdoors at once and fixed fountains can’t keep up. Stations fill the gap on game days and outdoor events through the warm season.
→ See West Jordan school water station rentalsWest Jordan Cooling and Public-Health Event Hydration
During an Intermountain heat wave, community centers and city facilities such as the Gene Fullmer Recreation Center see far heavier traffic than a normal day. A facility built for an ordinary crowd can absorb several times that during a multi-day heat event. Our stations stage in the parking lot with shade canopies so the line outside the building is a hydration line, not just a wait line.
→ See West Jordan public-health event water station rentalsWest Jordan Parks, Recreation, and Sports Hydration
Veterans Memorial Park, Conservation Garden Park, the Mountain View Golf Course, and the city’s ballfields host tournaments, festivals, and outdoor crew work all summer. Grounds crews and weekend tournament organizers both run in 90-100°F afternoons. The station goes where the field or the crew is, not where the rec office is.
→ See West Jordan parks and recreation water station rentalsWest Jordan Corporate Campus and Business-Park Water Stations
West Jordan is home to 3,000-plus licensed businesses across retail, tech, manufacturing, and distribution. The pattern is consistent: a few hundred to a few thousand people at a campus all-hands in a parking-lot tent, a product launch with media, a ribbon cutting for a new wing. Facilities directors who book us once tend to book us several times a year.
→ See West Jordan corporate event water station rentalsWest Jordan Religious and Civic Event Hydration
Ward and stake gatherings, city celebrations, and cultural festivals across Veterans Memorial Park, Conservation Garden Park, and the civic campus on Redwood Road draw large summer crowds. Civic organizers tend to underestimate water demand by 30 to 40 percent. We staff the station plan accordingly so the line never outruns the supply.
→ See West Jordan civic event water station rentalsWest Jordan Government and Municipal Water Stations
The City of West Jordan at 8000 S Redwood Road, Salt Lake County facilities, and public-works crews all run outdoor operations through the summer. We provide hydration for municipal and institutional operations with SAM.gov registration already in vendor systems, so the procurement paperwork side is handled while the delivery side stays fast.
→ See West Jordan municipal water station rentalsWest Jordan Brand Activation and Sponsorship Water Stations
Jordan Landing retail activations, Western Stampede sponsorship rows, and West Jordan Arena event footprints all run promotional moments where a wrapped station turns a utility asset into a brand touchpoint. We have wrapped stations in everything from a beverage logo to an event color treatment. Custom branding turns the water plan into part of the show.
→ See West Jordan brand activation water station rentalsWest Jordan Rural, Foothill, and Off-Grid Water Station Rentals
The Oquirrh foothills above Copperton and Welby, trailheads, foothill weddings, and remote work sites often sit off-grid: no water hookup, no power, single-lane access. Retreats and outdoor gatherings in the hills are growing fast. The station is the water plan. We deliver with the tank pre-filled and the chiller pre-cooled.
→ See West Jordan rural and off-grid water station rentalsPick the West Jordan Rental Term That Fits Your Job
Some West Jordan jobs are an afternoon. Some are an 18-month construction lease. Here are the rental shapes we run most often.
- Single-Day Rentals. A wedding at Conservation Garden Park, a Saturday promotion at Jordan Landing, a single-day grading push on a Dry Creek Highlands pad. Station delivered in the morning, picked up that night.
- Weekend Rentals. The three-day Western Stampede over the July 2-4 holiday, a Friday-through-Sunday concert run at the West Jordan Arena, a youth tournament weekend at a city recreation field.
- Weekly Rentals. An Oquirrh West model-home opening week, a Frito-Lay maintenance-shutdown stretch, a Mountain View Corridor grading project that bridges two pay periods.
- Monthly Rentals. A distribution-center peak-season ramp, a Quality Electrical Systems plant expansion crew rotation, a multi-week subdivision framing phase in Jordan Hills.
- Long-Term Construction Leases. The Mountain View Corridor freeway conversion. A Jordan Landing mixed-use build-out. A multi-phase master-planned community in Welby or Copper Hills. We bill monthly, swap chillers and filters on a maintenance schedule, and rotate stations in and out without breaking the crew’s daily hydration rhythm.
- Emergency Same-Day Rentals. A Tuesday-afternoon event vendor whose included water plan fell through. A warehouse whose AC went down during a heat advisory. A subdivision crew that just lost its only cooler on a 100°F afternoon. Our average West Jordan same-day promise-to-pour: under 4 hours.
- Recurring Service Contracts. Standing summer placements at distribution centers, monthly facility events, and weekend tournament fields across Salt Lake County.
- Multi-Trailer Deployments. A Western Stampede footprint needing several stations across the rodeo grounds, carnival, and parade route. A large warehouse campus needing stations staged across multiple dock doors.
- Custom-Branded Rentals. Sponsor wraps, corporate logo treatments, event-specific color schemes. Lead time depends on art turnaround.
West Jordan Heat Illness Prevention
Worker safety on a West Jordan jobsite isn’t theoretical. It is a 98°F July afternoon with a 14-person grading crew working an open Mountain View Corridor stretch, a distribution-center yard crew loading trailers through the hottest part of the day, a Frito-Lay process line where indoor heat builds past the thermostat by midshift. Utah Occupational Safety and Health (UOSH), the state plan under the Utah Labor Commission, lists heat illness prevention as a core service and centers its guidance on water, rest, shade, acclimatization, and training. Federal OSHA is finalizing a national heat rule that would trigger water-rest-shade at roughly an 80°F heat index and add high-heat procedures near 90°F. The most-cited outdoor-heat benchmark in the country, Cal/OSHA Title 8 §3395, is what forward-looking Utah employers voluntarily follow. In plain language, here is what responsible high-desert hydration looks like:
Drinking water that’s suitably cool, free, and accessible.
“Suitably cool” means under 77°F. At least one quart per hour per worker for the full shift. The water source has to be as close as practicable to the work area, not a quarter mile back at the gate.
Shade access when the temperature reaches 80°F or more.
Enough shade for everyone on rest, with backrest seating, and the shade has to be open-air ventilated (not a sealed metal box that turns into an oven in the high-desert sun).
High-heat procedures when the temperature reaches 95°F.
Pre-shift meetings. Effective observation and monitoring of every worker. Reminders to drink water. Designating workers authorized to call for emergency response. West Jordan’s risk profile lights up across these triggers more often than people realize. Summers here are hot, dry, and mostly clear, with July and August routinely reaching the high-90s and low-100s and the lowest humidity of the year, which drives evaporative water loss even faster than the thermometer suggests. At 4,330 feet of elevation the solar load on an open grading site or an outdoor rodeo grandstand is intense. Indoor heat at the Frito-Lay plant, the Quality Electrical Systems floor, and the valley’s large distribution warehouses is a year-round exposure independent of the weather. Heat-related citations and, far worse, heat-illness incidents are preventable, and the cost of a station rental that documents the water source, the temperature, the placement, and the refill rate is a small fraction of one serious event.
Our Signature Series stations were spec’d against the §3395 benchmark from the start. Cabinet-chilled water under 77°F. Four-tap throughput that keeps the line moving for crews on a 10-minute rest. Placement flexibility that lets the foreman park the station inside the work zone. A foreman’s daily water-rest-shade sheet practically fills itself out.
West Jordan’s High-Desert Heat and Why It Matters for Hydration
West Jordan sits at the southwest end of the Salt Lake Valley against the Oquirrh Mountains, and the heat does not behave the same everywhere a crew works. Hydration planning that treats a 4,330-foot high-desert summer like a mild coastal one misses badly. Here is how the conditions actually behave through the warm season.
Early Mornings (the safest, coolest work window).
Mornings in early summer can start in the 60s, but the dry air heats fast once the sun clears the Wasatch. By mid-morning open grading pads and rodeo grounds are already climbing. Crews that start at 6 a.m. get the coolest, safest window of the day, which is why early staging of cold water matters.
Late Spring and Early Summer Afternoons.
Through most of June the valley runs 85-95°F in the afternoon. Jordan Landing parking lots, warehouse yards, and subdivision streets radiate stored heat into the early evening, which matters for after-work events and second-shift dock crews.
Peak Summer (July and August highs).
July and August, the hottest stretch, regularly push 95-102°F with humidity near its annual low of about 27 percent. Open homebuilding sites in Welby, Copper Hills, and Jordan Hills sit in full sun. This is when high-heat procedures and aggressive water staging earn their keep.
Indoor Process and Warehouse Heat.
Indoor process heat is its own zone. The Frito-Lay production floor, the Quality Electrical Systems manufacturing space, and the valley’s large distribution warehouses build interior temperatures well past the outdoor reading on a summer afternoon. These crews need cold water staged on the floor year-round, not just in July.
Outdoor Event Exposure (rodeo grounds and open venues).
Multi-day outdoor events out at the West Jordan Rodeo Grounds and Veterans Memorial Park run through the peak of the day in early July. Pre-cooled station staging, shade canopies, and a refill plan are essential because consumption rates spike when thousands of spectators are exposed to direct high-desert sun for hours.
The swing from a 60-degree dawn to a 100-degree afternoon inside a single West Jordan workday is the high-desert hydration reality competitors don’t always account for. We do.
West Jordan Neighborhoods and Cities We Deliver To
We dispatch across West Jordan and the Salt Lake Valley every week. Here are the corridors our stations know best.
Jordan Landing
Pop: ~80,000 daytime
The 500-acre Jordan Landing mixed-use center anchors retail promotions, theater openings, and outdoor commercial events. We know which surface lots and service drives take a 20-foot station and which don’t.
Copperton & Oquirrh Foothills
Pop: ~1,000
Historic Copperton and the Oquirrh slope neighborhoods host foothill weddings, trailheads, and outdoor gatherings with no water hookups nearby. Off-grid staging is our bread and butter.
Welby
Pop: ~12,000
Western growth area along the Oquirrh slopes with active homebuilding and grading. Subdivision crews need cold water staged inside the work zone, not at the gate.
Planning the full West Jordan event or project? Add on-site cold storage with West Jordan mobile freezer trailer rentals and upscale guest facilities with luxury restroom trailer rentals West Jordan.
Copper Hills
Pop: ~20,000
The Copper Hills area on the west side mixes growing residential subdivisions with school and community events. Tighter station placements on graded pads and new streets.
West Jordan Rodeo Grounds
Pop: Event venue
Home of the Western Stampede at 8000 S Redwood Road. Rodeo weekends, demolition derbies, and concerts at the adjacent arena draw large summer crowds in full high-desert sun.
Jordan Hills & Oquirrh
Pop: ~15,000
Newer-home neighborhoods near Lodestone Park and the Jordan Landing plaza. Master-planned phases, model-home openings, and HOA events. Easy access off Bangerter Highway.
West Jordan Industrial Corridor
Pop: 60,000+ workers
The warehouse, distribution, and manufacturing belt. Frito-Lay, Quality Electrical Systems, and large fulfillment centers run indoor process heat that demands cold water on the floor year-round.
South Jordan & Daybreak
Pop: ~88,000
Master-planned Daybreak events, lakeside gatherings, and a steady homebuilding pipeline just south of West Jordan. Outdoor crews and community festivals through the warm season.
West Valley City
Pop: ~140,000
Utah’s second-largest city, just north. Maverik Center events, industrial parks, and large warehouse operations. Heavy workforce-hydration demand through summer.
Sandy & Midvale
Pop: ~125,000
Mountain America Center concerts, retail-center activations, youth sports, and construction along the east bench. Quick access via I-15 and Bangerter.
Riverton & Herriman
Pop: ~115,000
Fast-growing southwest valley cities with active subdivisions and the coming Mountain View Corridor freeway phase. Open grading sites and community events in full sun.
Taylorsville & Murray
Pop: ~120,000
Established cities northeast of West Jordan with industrial parks, Murray Park festivals, and hospital and campus events. Reliable corridors our drivers run weekly.
Our Part in a More Sustainable West Jordan
Every 300-gallon station fill displaces roughly 2,400 single-use plastic bottles. A three-day Western Stampede footprint pulling refills can displace over 30,000 bottles across the run. A distribution center running stations across a full summer peak season can displace north of a million bottles. The math compounds fast at West Jordan workforce scale.
The transportation math compounds too. A single tow trip to a West Jordan warehouse campus replaces what would otherwise be four to six pallet deliveries of bottled water across the same week. That is diesel saved, congestion reduced on the Mountain View Corridor and Bangerter Highway, and a Scope 3 emissions line item that corporate sustainability reports increasingly want documented. Large Salt Lake Valley employers are asked to document container reduction in their sustainability filings. The station answers the question on the form.
The filtration footprint matters as well. Multi-stage filtration on a station uses dramatically less water than the bottled-water supply chain consumes upstream. A single liter of bottled water typically requires three to five liters of water in manufacturing, transportation, and disposal infrastructure. Station-filtered water skips the bottling plant, the freight, and the landfill.
A responsive local supply chain closes the loop. Family-owned operation with more than two decades in the rental trade. W-2 crews. Permitted, inspected trailers. The truck that pulls into your Jordan Landing loading dock or your warehouse yard off Bangerter Highway shows up dispatched by our own people, on our own insurance, not relayed through a broker three states over.
Your West Jordan Questions, Answered
Most West Jordan and Salt Lake County deliveries land in 24-48 hours from booking, and our same-day window during heat advisories and peak weekends sits around 4 hours from promise to pour. We dispatch across the valley every week using Bangerter Highway, Mountain View Corridor, and I-15, which keeps the timing tight even when the call comes in last-minute.
Yes. Utah Occupational Safety and Health (UOSH) enforces workplace safety under the Utah Labor Commission and lists heat illness prevention as a core service, centered on water, rest, shade, acclimatization, and training. Federal OSHA is finalizing a national heat rule. The most-cited benchmark, Cal/OSHA §3395, calls for cool water under 77°F, at least one quart per worker per hour, as close as practicable to the work. Our Signature Series stations are built to meet that standard, and the setup documents itself on a daily water-rest-shade log.
The leading benchmark calls for at least one quart of cool water per worker per hour for the full shift, with the source as close as practicable to the work area. A single 300-gallon Signature Series station holds enough cold water to keep a large West Jordan crew supplied through a 95-100°F afternoon, and for multi-day jobs we schedule refills so the tank never runs low.
A single Signature Series station comfortably serves 400-800 people for a 4-hour event in typical valley temperatures. In peak July high-desert heat that range tightens because consumption climbs. For a wedding at Conservation Garden Park, one station is plenty. For the Western Stampede or a large warehouse campus, we stage multiple stations across the footprint.
Yes, that is a core part of our West Jordan book. Distribution and fulfillment floors build indoor heat well past the thermostat on a summer afternoon. We stage stations across dock doors and break areas, deliver pre-filled and pre-chilled, and run refill schedules for peak season so crews refill in seconds and nobody walks the floor dehydrated.
No. Our stations arrive pre-filled with a 300-gallon tank and pre-chilled, so they run with no water hookup and no power on site. That is why they work for Oquirrh-foothill weddings, off-grid foothill retreats, open grading sites, and outdoor venues. For multi-day deployments we schedule refill trips. No utilities required.
Yes, that is how we run the big ones. For the Western Stampede across the rodeo grounds, carnival, and parade route, or for a large warehouse campus, we map drop points across the footprint and time each station to the load-in schedule. Tell us your event-ops contact and the load-in window, and we position stations near the grandstand, midway, or dock doors where people actually gather, refilling on a schedule across the run.
Yes. We have wrapped stations in beverage logos, corporate color treatments, sports identities, and event activation art for promotions at Jordan Landing and the Western Stampede. Lead time depends on art turnaround and wrap install scheduling, typically 2-4 weeks for a full vinyl wrap. Lighter overlays such as front panels, signage, and banner attachments can turn in days.
We hold inventory specifically for these windows, but availability moves fast. The July 2-4 Western Stampede weekend and the summer warehouse peak both absorb our standby pool quickly. Booking 6-8 weeks ahead is best for events and long leases. Same-day calls still get a hearing if anything has rotated back.
A single 300-gallon station fill displaces roughly 2,400 single-use plastic bottles, and one tow trip replaces four to six pallet deliveries of bottled water across a week. That means less freight, less waste, a documented sustainability line item, and a cleaner jobsite. The station also keeps water cold under 77°F at four taps, which a warming pallet of bottles in the July sun cannot do. For a specific quote, call (866) 748-5932 or request one online and we’ll respond within the hour.
Ready to Lock In Your West Jordan Water Station Rental?
Whether it is a wedding at Conservation Garden Park, a Mountain View Corridor construction crew working a long-term lease through the next pay period, a Frito-Lay production floor that needs cold water staged before the summer shutdown, or a Tuesday-afternoon Western Stampede vendor who just realized the water plan they thought was included isn’t, we have a station with your name on it. We have been running water station rentals for 20-plus years, and the West Jordan book is one of the busiest we have in Utah. Cold water under 77°F. Four push-back taps. 300-gallon tanks pre-filled and pre-chilled. A+ BBB accredited. SAM.gov registered for institutional procurement. ISN member contractor. Thousands of 5-star reviews from the facilities managers, distribution-center safety leads, homebuilding superintendents, and event organizers who have already worked with us. Call (866) 748-5932 or request a West Jordan quote and we’ll have you booked the same business day.
24/7 emergency dispatch
Mon-Fri 6a-7p · Sat 7a-5p · Sun by appointment · 24/7 emergency dispatch for heat advisories and active incident response · A+ BBB accredited · SAM.gov registered · ISN member contractor