
Water Station Rentals North Las Vegas
Our Nevada yard sits inside North Las Vegas, so cold filtered water station rentals roll straight off our home lot to your crew or your crowd faster than anyone else in the state.
North Las Vegas bakes. July afternoons run past 104 degrees on the valley floor and the Mojave air is so dry your crew sweats it off before they ever feel wet, which is exactly how a worker ends up down before lunch. This is home base for us. Our trucks stage here, our dispatchers live here, and when you call for a hydration station the unit comes off a yard inside city limits, not a depot two states away. Cold water at the tap, day or night, and you can stop hauling pallets of bottles that go warm by ten in the morning.
Our Nevada Yard Is in North Las Vegas
This is the one. North Las Vegas is our Nevada home yard, the lot the trucks return to and the address on our dispatch board. The person who answers your call and the driver who pulls onto your site both live in this valley, run Apex deliveries every week, and know which gate at the Speedway to use during a NASCAR weekend. No other water-station company in Nevada can say a unit comes off a yard inside North Las Vegas itself. For most jobs in the city and across the valley that means a station on site within 45 minutes, and an emergency drop the same hour when a heat day turns ugly. The map below is the ground we cover daily out of this yard.
Why North Las Vegas Calls Us First for Water Stations
We are the name North Las Vegas crews and event planners reach for when people still need to drink in Mojave heat, and being headquartered right here is a big part of why. Everything that built our reputation in rentals carries over to getting cold, clean water to a jobsite or a crowd, only now it leaves from a yard a few minutes from you.
A+ BBB Accredited
We carry an A+ with the Better Business Bureau and a long run of 5-star reviews. Put a North Las Vegas job in our hands and you're trusting a company with a proven record, not rolling the dice on an unknown.
A Yard Right Here in North Las Vegas
Our Nevada hub is a yard inside the city, backed by a Western network across California, Arizona, and Utah. Most North Las Vegas jobs see a unit inside 45 minutes, and an Apex pad or a Speedway lot the same day.
We Pick Up, 24 Hours a Day
Dispatch, support, and availability run around the clock. So when a graveyard shift at a warehouse runs the tank low at 3 a.m., a real person from this yard answers and gets a truck moving, not a recording.
A Family Event-Rental Trade, Two Generations Deep
Renting gear for events has been the family business for two generations. That depth means we read a North Las Vegas job, and the spot where it could go sideways, faster than anyone newer to this work.
Big Enough to Deliver, Small Enough to Care
You get a large operation's fleet and reliability paired with the attention of a neighbor whose yard is down the road. Scale up for an Apex megasite, get a local outfit's accountability either way.
Our Units, Our Crews, Our Accountability
We aren't a broker handing your job to a stranger. The trailers belong to us and the drivers are on our payroll out of this North Las Vegas yard, so the buck stops with the company you actually dialed.
Licensed, Insured, and DOT-Compliant
You're covered whatever the day brings. We hold full licensing and insurance, run DOT-compliant, and issue a Certificate of Insurance for whatever a venue, an Apex GC, or a federal site demands.
Chosen by the Strictest Buyers
Corporate America, federal agencies, municipalities, and school districts already book us first. When buyers with the toughest approval standards sign off, that vetting work is already done on your behalf.
American-Built to Take a Beating
Every station is made in the USA to last. No DIY rigs, no plans off a video, nothing imported from overseas, just durable equipment built for desert work that runs hard.
Introducing the Signature Series, Our Premier Cold Water Bottle Filling Station
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 the kind of Mojave heat North Las Vegas 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 sits at 104°F, and multi-stage filtration that pulls the hard-mineral taste out of valley water. It tows in, levels on rough or unpaved ground, and runs self-contained on shore power or a small generator. That’s what lets one rig work an Apex distribution pad, a Las Vegas Motor Speedway lot, or a downtown NLV build with the same ease.
On site it’s quick. We back it in, level it on whatever you’ve got, and either tie into a hose bib or run it off the onboard tank. A few minutes later it’s pouring. That’s the whole setup. Your people pull cold water from four taps all shift while we handle the refills and the haul-off, so water never lands back on your plate until the job wraps.
| 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 |
North Las Vegas Jobs and Events We Keep Hydrated
A 24/7 fulfillment center at Apex and a sold-out NASCAR weekend at the Speedway have almost nothing in common except this: people working or gathered in Mojave heat who need cold water within arm’s reach. That one shared need is the whole reason we exist. Here are the North Las Vegas situations our dispatchers field most out of this yard, and what the unit does in each.
Apex Industrial Park Construction
Apex spans 18,000 acres with roughly 7,000 developable and around 28.5 million square feet built, rising, or planned. Build crews work raw exurban pads northeast of the city with no retail water for miles. We stage chilled stations per active zone and refill on a route so a big pad never runs dry.
Amazon & Sephora Fulfillment
Amazon's 2.4-million-square-foot fulfillment center and Sephora's 714,000-square-foot distribution facility run thousands of workers through high-bay space that bakes in summer. We park stations at dock doors and pick zones, the indoor heat Nevada's rule now names directly.
Distribution & Logistics Warehouses
VanTrust alone is adding a 4.5-million-square-foot complex on 350 acres at Apex, on top of the Honest Co. and Fanatics buildings already running. Un-conditioned docks and staging lanes turn into ovens by midday. We hold cold water at the loading faces where crews actually move freight.
Las Vegas Motor Speedway Events
The Pennzoil 400 in spring, the South Point 400 in fall, plus NHRA drag weekends and drift events pack the grounds with crews and crowds in open desert sun for days. We stage refill points across midways, pit areas, and grandstand entries so lines never stack up in the heat.
Data Center Build-Outs
Southern Nevada's data-center pipeline is expanding hard, with Google's roughly $400 million campus among the projects driving construction labor onto exposed pads. We stage a station per work zone and move it with the pour, the way these long greenfield builds demand.
North Las Vegas VA Medical Center
The North Las Vegas VA Medical Center campus runs outdoor facilities, grounds, and contractor crews through the worst of the summer. A chilled station near a work area or a staging zone keeps maintenance and trade teams hydrated without anyone leaving the site for water.
Residential Build-Out: Aliante & Tule Springs
North Las Vegas grew about 12.6 percent in four years to near 294,000 people, and master-planned communities like Aliante and Tule Springs keep framing, roofing, and concrete crews on open slabs all summer. Rooftop work is the hottest exposure there is, and heat downtime costs more than the rental.
Craig Ranch Regional Park Festivals
Craig Ranch Regional Park hosts the Taco Festival, Pirate Fest, and Las Vegas Pride across its open lawns. Thousands of guests on sun-exposed grass drink a lot of water fast. We distribute stations across the footprint so nobody waits in a line under the sun.
Manufacturing & Light Industrial
The North Las Vegas industrial base keeps growing alongside the warehouse boom, and plant floors and yard operations run hot in summer. A station staged near the line or the yard gate gives shift workers cold water without a walk across a baking lot to a vending machine.
Roadwork & Utility Crews
Paving, utility, and pipeline crews work hot asphalt and open trenches across North Las Vegas on shifting zones with no fixed water nearby. A relocatable chilled station rolls with the work front where trucking warm cases out to the job would otherwise be the only option.
Aliante & Casino Events
Aliante Casino Hotel and the Cannery run outdoor concerts, pool events, and parking-lot activations through the summer season. We stage stations at entries, queues, and event lawns where the crowd bunches up and the desert sun does its worst.
Desert Weddings & Outdoor Celebrations
Backyard and venue weddings around Aliante, Eldorado, and the valley's edge put dressed-up guests in heat that's harder on the body than it looks. A clean station at cocktail hour serves a few hundred guests cold water with none of the plastic-bottle clutter.
Film, Photo & Special Events
Productions shoot the desert and industrial backdrops around North Las Vegas and the Speedway, often far from any tap. A self-contained 300-gallon chilled tank stands up a base camp with zero hookup, covering catering, talent, and crew through a long shoot day.
Government, Military & Campuses
Nellis Air Force Base sits right at the city's edge and federal and city facilities run field crews through the summer far from a reliable tap. We hold active SAM.gov registration, so we can bid federal work the day a solicitation posts and roll a unit off this yard fast.
How We Cover North Las Vegas, District by District
North Las Vegas isn’t one job. The Apex pads northeast of town, the warehouse corridor, the master-planned suburbs, and the Speedway each drink differently and each takes a different dispatch out of our yard. Here’s how we run each one and what it needs.
Apex Industrial Park & the Northeast
Apex · the I-15 north corridor · the US-93 junction
The Microclimate
Open Mojave high desert northeast of the city, exposed and shadeless, where summer afternoons push past 104°F and the wind carries grit across raw pads. There's no retail water, no plumbing, and no shade for miles on most of these greenfield sites until a building goes vertical.
Where It Is Needed
The Amazon and Sephora distribution buildings, the VanTrust 4.5-million-square-foot complex underway, the Honest Co. and Fanatics facilities, and the wave of new construction across the 18,000-acre park — the kind of large-scale industrial and manufacturing facility buildout where delivered hydration is the only practical option.
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 full and cold, bring a generator when there's no shore power, stage a unit per active zone, and move it with the work front as the pad develops.
The Aliante & Tule Springs Suburbs
Aliante · Tule Springs · Eldorado · Sun City Aliante
The Microclimate
Master-planned valley-floor neighborhoods near 2,000 feet, dry and clear nearly year round, where the same Mojave heat lands on residential build sites and event lawns alike. Summer construction here means open slabs and rooftops with crews exposed from the first hour of the shift.
Where It Is Needed
Fast-growing residential framing and roofing in Aliante and Tule Springs, Aliante Casino Hotel events, neighborhood and community celebrations, and backyard and venue weddings across these northern suburbs.
How the Signature Series Fills the Need
We drop chilled stations on greenfield home sites before any plumbing exists, and stage event units at casino lawns, parking-lot activations, and wedding cocktail hours. Self-contained operation matters because so much of this work happens on raw land first.
Craig Ranch & Central North Las Vegas
Craig Ranch · downtown NLV · Cheyenne corridor · the warehouse district
The Microclimate
The older, denser core of the city plus the warehouse belt, all on the dry valley floor in full summer sun. Craig Ranch Regional Park's open lawns and the un-conditioned docks of the central industrial district both turn into heat traps from late morning on.
Where It Is Needed
The Taco Festival, Pirate Fest, and Las Vegas Pride at Craig Ranch Regional Park, the North Las Vegas VA Medical Center campus, central warehouse and distribution operations, and downtown civic and city facilities.
How the Signature Series Fills the Need
We distribute refill points across festival footprints so lines stay short, hold cold water at dock faces and warehouse staging lanes, and cover VA and civic crews. Our yard is minutes from this core, so a same-hour drop is realistic here.
Las Vegas Motor Speedway & the Event Grounds
Las Vegas Motor Speedway · Nellis AFB edge · the northeast event corridor
The Microclimate
Wide-open desert event grounds with zero natural shade, where race-weekend crowds and pit crews sit in direct sun for entire days and the asphalt re-radiates heat well into the evening. Peak summer and shoulder-season events both run dangerously hot here.
Where It Is Needed
The Pennzoil 400 and South Point 400 NASCAR weekends, NHRA drag racing, drift and Test-n-Tune events, special-event productions, and the Nellis Air Force Base field operations nearby.
How the Signature Series Fills the Need
We stage chilled stations across midways, pit areas, grandstand entries, and camping lots, then schedule refills against the event run-of-show. For multi-day race weekends we run several units at once with a route built around the crowd peaks. Groups planning events across the broader metro can also explore Las Vegas hydration coverage for venues closer to the Strip corridor.
What We've Learned Running North Las Vegas Out of Our Own Yard
A lot of what makes a rental go right here never shows up on a spec sheet. It's what our drivers and dispatchers have picked up running this city out of our North Las Vegas yard, and it's worth sharing because it changes how you should plan.
Home-yard speed is the whole advantage
Because our Nevada yard sits inside North Las Vegas, we beat every out-of-town competitor on the clock that matters most: the gap between your call and cold water on site. We've rolled an emergency unit to a central-NLV job in under an hour when a crew's bottled-water plan collapsed on a 105-degree afternoon. A company dispatching from California or even from the south valley simply can't match a truck that starts a few minutes from your gate. That edge is the reason we built the hub here.
Apex pads are their own kind of remote
People hear North Las Vegas and picture city water everywhere. Wrong, at least out at Apex. Those pads sit on raw desert northeast of town with no plumbing, no shade, and grit blowing across the site, so we bring the tank full and cold and bring a generator if there's no shore power yet. We service the chiller intake filter on longer Apex deployments too, because that desert dust will quietly choke the cold output if nobody's watching it.
Speedway weekends are a surge, not a delivery
A NASCAR weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway isn't one drop, it's a three-day crowd-and-crew surge in open sun. We've learned to stage several units across the grounds before gates open and time refills to the run-of-show, because the dangerous stretch is the long afternoon between the practice sessions and the green flag, not a single peak. Plan the count off the crowd and the pit headcount together, never just one.
Dry heat hides how fast a crew is losing water
North Las Vegas summers run single-digit humidity, so sweat evaporates the instant it surfaces and a worker never feels wet. We've watched crews go down at what the thermometer called a manageable morning because they were drinking for how they felt, not for what the Mojave was actually pulling out of them. So we size hydration for the dryness, not just the high, and we push placement close to the work.
Placement beats unit count, every time
The most common mistake we see is one station parked at the gate of a sprawling warehouse or pad. On an Apex fulfillment build or a data-center deck, our drivers stage a unit per active zone and move it as the work moves. A crew that has to walk a quarter mile across a hot lot for water just drinks less, and then you're managing a heat call instead of a refill.
We walk the access before we commit the trailer
Half of the hard North Las Vegas deliveries aren't about heat, they're about getting a tow vehicle and a 3,100-pound trailer onto a raw Apex pad and back off it. Before we promise a remote drop out there, our driver checks the road in, the turnaround, and whether the pad will hold the rig in soft ground. We've saved more than one job by routing around a soft shoulder that would've stranded the unit when the crew needed it most.
What North Las Vegas Crews and Planners Tell Us
We had trades spread across a fulfillment pad at Apex through a July heat wave and our bottled-water plan fell apart by mid-morning. I called them and a Signature Series was on site that afternoon, then they added a unit per zone. Having their yard right here in North Las Vegas is the only reason we got it that fast.

Race weekend at the Speedway had crowds and pit crews in full desert sun for three days straight. They staged stations across the grounds and ran refills against our schedule so the water never ran out at the worst moment. Cold water, no drama, and they answered every call during build.

Our docks are un-conditioned and they bake by noon. They dropped chilled stations right at the loading faces and kept them topped off through our graveyard shift. A driver from their own North Las Vegas yard showed up at 2 a.m. when we ran low. That kind of response you just don't get from a vendor two states away.

Our festival at Craig Ranch had thousands of people on open lawns and the old water points were a bottleneck. They distributed stations across the footprint and the lines disappeared. Local, easy to work with, and they genuinely cared it went right. We book them every season now.

Get Cold Water on Your North Las Vegas Site Today
Whether you need water station rentals for an event, a hydration station for a jobsite, or a bottle filling station for a campus, send us the location, the dates, and the headcount. Because our yard is right here in North Las Vegas, we can often confirm same-day delivery in the city, and every quote includes the Nevada water-per-worker capacity math. We answer 24/7.
📞 Call Now (866) 748-5932Request a QuoteEverything to Know Before You Rent in North Las Vegas
The deeper detail, sorted so you open only what you need: the heat science, Nevada’s new heat rule and what it means for you, where the water comes from and how we filter it, and the sustainability case in a city pulling from a shrinking Lake Mead. This is the knowledge base behind being the most informed water-station partner operating in North Las Vegas.
North Las Vegas sits in the Mojave Desert on the valley floor near 2,000 feet, and its climate is classified as hot desert (BWk). July average highs run about 104°F, and the air is brutally dry, often in the single-digit-to-teens percent range through the hottest months. That dryness is the trap. Sweat evaporates the instant it reaches the skin, so a worker never feels wet and badly underestimates how much fluid they’re losing.
From there dehydration moves fast, through fatigue and clouded judgment to heat exhaustion and, once sweating stops, heat stroke. Southern Nevada records heat-associated deaths every summer, with Clark County reporting record counts in recent extreme-heat seasons. On a shadeless Apex pad or a Speedway lot with the asphalt re-radiating heat into the evening, cold water genuinely within reach is the single most effective way to keep a crew or a crowd ahead of that curve.
This is where Nevada is ahead of most of the country, and it matters for your jobsite. Nevada adopted a statewide Heat Illness Prevention regulation, R131-24AP, which the Legislative Commission approved on November 15, 2024. The Nevada Division of Industrial Relations began enforcement on April 29, 2025, so this is live law, not a proposal.
The rule applies to employers with 10 or more workers and covers both outdoor and indoor settings, which is why a baking Apex warehouse dock is squarely in scope. Covered employers must complete a job hazard analysis and, depending on the result, adopt a written Heat Illness Prevention Plan, set emergency-response procedures, monitor affected workers, and train crews to recognize heat illness. The state’s own DIR Heat Illness Prevention guidance spells out the expectations, and the federal water-rest-shade benchmark sets a quart of cool water per worker per hour. A chilled, filtered station staged at the work zone is the cleanest way to meet that access requirement, and our quotes run the capacity math for you.
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. North Las Vegas itself draws from two supplies: groundwater pumped from the deep carbonate aquifer at city wells, and surface water from the Colorado River at Lake Mead, treated and delivered through the Southern Nevada Water Authority. Roughly 90 percent of the region’s supply comes from the Colorado River. That water runs hard and mineral-heavy, which is exactly the taste that keeps people from drinking enough on a hot jobsite or at an event. The on-board filtration strips that out and the chiller serves it cold, the combination that actually gets crews and crowds to hydrate.
North Las Vegas pulls most of its water from a Colorado River system under real strain. Lake Mead has dropped to near-record lows during the long Southwest drought, so conservation and single-use-plastic reduction sit right inside the sustainability goals that local events and public agencies are measured against.
At event scale the disposable-bottle stream gets ugly fast: a Speedway race weekend or a Craig Ranch festival can move tens of thousands of plastic bottles toward a landfill in a few days. A refillable chilled station flips that, serving colder water and almost no waste at once. On the jobsite side, ending the truck-in, truck-out cycle of bottled water to a remote Apex pad is a small, visible win that also leaves the crew better hydrated than the cases ever did.
North Las Vegas Water Station Questions, Answered
Faster than anyone else in the state, because the trucks stage on a lot inside city limits. For most North Las Vegas jobs we confirm same-day delivery, and we’ve rolled an emergency unit to a central-NLV site in under an hour when a crew’s bottled-water plan collapsed on a 105-degree afternoon. Send the address and dates and we’ll name the soonest window.
The clock that matters: the gap between your call and cold water on site. The dispatcher who answers and the driver who pulls up both live in this valley and run Apex and Speedway deliveries every week. A company starting from California or even the south valley can’t match a truck that begins a few minutes from your gate, which is the whole reason we built the Nevada hub here.
That’s exactly what the rig is built for. Across the 18,000-acre park, with roughly 28.5 million square feet built, rising, or planned, most pads sit on raw desert with no retail water nearby. The 300-gallon tank arrives full and cold, we bring a right-sized generator when there’s no shore power yet, and we stage a unit per active zone and move it with the work front.
Yes, and that indoor heat is now squarely in scope under Nevada’s rule. We park stations at dock doors and pick zones inside the Amazon 2.4-million-square-foot fulfillment center, the Sephora 714,000-square-foot facility, and the VanTrust complex going up on 350 acres. The chiller holds drinking temperature whether the unit sits in the high-bay or out on the dock apron.
It does, indoor and out. Nevada’s statewide Heat Illness Prevention regulation, R131-24AP, has been enforced since April 29, 2025, and it covers employers with 10 or more workers, which is every distribution operation out there. It requires accessible cool water plus a written plan. A chilled station at the dock face or staging lane is a direct way to meet the water-access piece, and our quotes run the capacity math.
It stays cold at the tap. The in-line chiller and insulated tank are specified for desert summer, so even after the rig has sat in direct North Las Vegas sun through a full warehouse shift, the water pours at drinking temperature. Cold water gets consumed and warm water gets ignored, which is the entire point on a 24/7 distribution floor.
We treat it as a surge, not a single drop. For the Pennzoil 400, the South Point 400, NHRA drag weekends, and drift days, we stage several units across midways, pit areas, grandstand entries, and camping lots before gates open, then time refills to your run-of-show. The dangerous stretch is the long afternoon between practice and the green flag, so we plan the count off crowd and pit headcount together.
A real person from this yard does, not a recording. Dispatch, support, and availability run around the clock, and we’ve had a driver off our own North Las Vegas lot show up at a logistics dock at 2 a.m. when a graveyard crew ran low. That 24/7 response is something a vendor two states away simply can’t offer your night shift.
Placement beats unit count every time. One station at the gate of a quarter-mile pad means crews walk less and drink less, and then you’re managing a heat call instead of a refill. Our drivers stage a unit per active zone on an Apex fulfillment build or a data-center deck and move each one as the work front shifts, so cold water is always within arm’s reach.
More than the thermometer suggests. North Las Vegas summers run single-digit humidity, so sweat evaporates the instant it surfaces and a worker never feels wet, then drinks for how they feel instead of what the desert is pulling out of them. We size hydration for the dryness, not just the high, and the federal benchmark of a quart of cool water per worker per hour is the floor, not the target, on a long warehouse rotation.
Yes, that’s routine. Apex megasites, race weekends, and Craig Ranch festivals often run multiple stations at once. It’s the same equipment and terms multiplied by the count, with a refill route built around your headcount and your peak hours. For a multi-day NASCAR weekend we’ll run several units with a route timed to the crowd peaks.
More than one. Craig Ranch hosts the Taco Festival, Pirate Fest, and Las Vegas Pride on open, sun-exposed lawns, and as a planning figure we budget roughly half a liter to a liter of drinking water per attendee for a multi-hour outdoor event. For 1,000 guests we usually distribute two to four stations across the footprint so nobody waits in a line under the sun, then size the exact count from your peak crowd.
Our driver walks the access first. Half the hard deliveries out at Apex aren’t about heat, they’re about getting a tow vehicle and a 3,100-pound trailer onto a raw pad and back off it. Before we commit, we check the road in, the turnaround, and whether soft ground will hold the rig. We’ve saved jobs by routing around a soft shoulder that would have stranded the unit when the crew needed it most.
Absolutely, and most of our Apex and distribution 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, including the chiller intake filter that desert dust will otherwise choke. Running concurrent North Las Vegas sites? We put them on one contract with one point of contact.
It’s built per project, not a flat rate, because the number depends on how many people the unit serves, how long you need it, and where it’s going. A backyard Aliante wedding and a 90-day Apex distribution deployment carry very different logistics. Give us those three details and we’ll return a quote with the water-per-worker capacity math and any generator recommendation for the site.
A water buffalo is just a towable tank and a cooler is a small dispenser, and neither holds up on a baking Apex dock. The Signature Series pairs a 300-gallon capacity with active in-line refrigeration, multi-stage filtration that strips the valley’s hard-mineral taste, and four push-back taps at once, so a full distribution shift pulls cold, clean, filtered water instead of warm tank water or one slow spout. It’s purpose-built for high-throughput hydration in Mojave heat.
North Las Vegas is our Nevada home. Our yard sits inside the city, backed by a Western U.S. network of yards across California, Arizona, and Utah, so for most jobs in town we can confirm same-day delivery, whether it's an Aliante wedding, a 90-day Apex construction deployment, or a NASCAR weekend at the Speedway. 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 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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