You can think of refrigerated trailer rentals almost like a limousine service for your perishable items. In a limo, you get VIP treatment and stylish travel. In an ice truck rental, luxury and style are replaced with plenty of room, accessible storage, and a temperature-controlled environment. These features keep your cargo cool and protected from outdoor elements like rain, sleet, and snow, so you can make sure your items arrive on time when you need them.
You may be wondering to yourself, "Refrigerated trailer rentals sound like the perfect fit for my business. But how do I find them in West Ashley, SC?" The easy answer to that question is to call Charleston Refrigerators Trailers - the Lowcountry's premier choice for high-quality refrigerated trailers and ice truck rentals.
Every one of our refrigerated trailer rentals are:
At CRT, we believe that renting a refrigerated trailer is about more than simply having a quality cooling unit. Unlike some refrigerated trailer rental companies, we incorporate friendly, helpful customer service into every transaction we complete. That way, our clients know that they're in good hands every time they call our office and have peace of mind that their business won't suffer due to lack of communication.
We also make it a point to be flexible for our customers and strive to go the extra mile for them to make their jobs and lives easier. Need power cords to hook up your ice truck for rent in West Ashley, SC? No problem, we can make that happen. Need to pick up one of our refrigerated trailer rentals yourself so you can deliver your own goods? We'd be happy to make arrangements so you can do so. Worried about the overnight security of your temperature-sensitive items? We're delighted to provide a padlock for extra security.
When you boil it down to the basics, West Ashley, SC Refrigerated Trailer has become successful in West Ashley, SC because we truly care about our customer's needs and go out of our way to ensure those needs are met.
We offer trailer rentals for both refrigerators and freezers, which are perfect for a number of industries and uses, including the following:
At Charleston Refrigerators Trailers, all of our mobile rentals are well-built and crafted with a seamless fiberglass design for both reliability and refrigeration efficiency. When you make arrangements to have an ice truck for rent in West Ashley, SC delivered or picked up, you'll enjoy a range of helpful trailer features, including the following:
Cooling and freezing take place reliably with an integrated GOVI Arktik 2000US series refrigeration unit. These compact units provide a temperature range of 0 to 50 degrees F, are all-electric, and only require 110V and 15 amps. Since our coolers have the capability of maintaining temps both below and above 32 degrees Fahrenheit, our ice truck rentals double as both freezers and coolers. This handy feature makes them a more convenient and robust tool for your personal or business needs versus other mobile cooler rentals in West Ashley, SC.
Generally speaking, refrigerated trailers aren't meant to cool down or freeze the items stored within them. Instead, they're meant to keep products at a specific temperature for a certain amount of time. At Charleston Refrigerators Trailers, our team members use Polar King Mobile trailers. We made the choice to use this brand for a reason: These ice trucks both meet and exceed all compliance guidelines set forth by the NATM or National Association of Trailer Manufacturers.
Our refrigerated trailers for rent utilize three major components:
Refrigeration units can run in cycles or continuously. Running the refrigeration unit in cycles reduces fuel consumption but creates more temperature variation. Frozen foods are less sensitive to temperature changes and can endure these variations. Continuous cooling is better suited for products and goods that are not able to withstand temperature variations well. At Charleston Refrigerators Trailers, our mobile rental options utilize continuous cooling to ensure your items don't suffer from temperature variations.
For business owners, managing funds and staying on top of costs is a crucial part of owning a profitable company. Purchasing and maintaining a fleet of refrigerated trailers can be a significant financial burden, requiring substantial capital investment and ongoing maintenance costs. However, renting refrigerated trucks can help businesses allocate their funds more wisely.
That's especially true for businesses that do not frequently engage in long-distance refrigerated shipping. Why purchase an entire vehicle and refrigeration system when you need the trailer for more minor tasks, like delivering flowers on Valentine's Day or storing products after an unexpected power outage? If you have a specific product line or a limited-time special, it's more practical to go with a refrigerated truck for rent than to purchase an ice truck outright.
In terms of the additional benefits of refrigerated trailer rentals, there's no shortage of them to highlight:
Looking for a spot to practice towing and trailering? Practicing these maneuvers in an empty parking lot is an excellent idea. It's always better to learn the movements of your trailer in empty spaces, so you can avoid any mishaps like trying to back up and park in front of a busy store.
Get QuoteAt West Ashley, SC Refrigerated Trailer, we're big proponents of giving our customers plenty of information. That way, they can make informed purchasing decisions and know how to better operate our ice truck rentals. To keep yourself educated, keep these FAQs in mind:
Renting a refrigerated trailer just makes good sense for many businesses in West Ashley, SC and the metro area. That's why West Ashley, SC Refrigerated Trailer proudly serves in West Ashley, SC and the Lowcountry with refrigerated and frozen transportation rentals. If you're looking for the reliability, convenience, flexibility, and cost-effectiveness of a refrigerated trailer for rent in West Ashley, SC, look no further than CRT.
(843) 296-6617
CHARLESTON — A local couple has found a treasure in a rundown building that was trashed for years on a busy West Ashley thoroughfare.The tiny spot at 2177 Ashley River Road formerly housed a dry cleaner business and has since languished without a tenant as vandals covered it in graffiti and homeless camped out in the back.But Jessica and Russell Luzier, owners of the family-run Stone Castings of Charleston, saw promise in it.The couple are doing their best to revive the heavily trafficked property — though th...
CHARLESTON — A local couple has found a treasure in a rundown building that was trashed for years on a busy West Ashley thoroughfare.
The tiny spot at 2177 Ashley River Road formerly housed a dry cleaner business and has since languished without a tenant as vandals covered it in graffiti and homeless camped out in the back.
But Jessica and Russell Luzier, owners of the family-run Stone Castings of Charleston, saw promise in it.
The couple are doing their best to revive the heavily trafficked property — though the project is taking much longer than expected. Jessica Luzier said they were hoping to open their storefront and manufacturing warehouse for custom-made stone products, such as fireplaces, countertops and fountains, this time last year. But extensive damage to the building and permit roadblocks have dragged the timeline out.
“When we took it over it was an abandoned property at that time and people had broken down the door to live inside and out back,” Luzier said. “There’s been a lot of neglect through the years, but also the people who moved in, they stripped the wiring out of the building and all that kind of stuff.”
Further hold-ups included adding a fire hydrant, which Luzier said she never anticipated to be their financial responsibility; coordinating to remove the garbage, such as rubber tires and drug paraphernalia dumped on the property over the years; and “emergency repairs” to water seal the building.
Luzier said she pleaded with Charleston County to allow her and her husband to jump a few steps ahead to stop water — and people — from getting in and wrecking the property further. She hopes those concerned about the condition and status of the site now can understand the timeline better.
Feeling at times as though they have taken one step forward and another step back, Luzier noted that the building was vandalized again a few weeks ago. She arrived to find the storefront’s newly installed $20,000 windows shattered.
As a small business owner, she said that’s not the kind of cash they have on hand for a quick fix.
The Luziers purchased the property for $515,000 in 2024, according to county records. It’s sandwiched between the large West Chase Apartment complex and the Interstate-526 overpass.
While the street frontage is narrow, the parcel spans almost an acre backward. The Luziers are using the extra space to constructing a manufacturing warehouse where they can hand-make their products on-site.
“We were really looking for something to make our home and outfit the space and we saw this would be a good fit for our business,” Luzier said.
She noted the store, expected to open in February or March, is a prime location for Stone Casting’s customers, which span all the way to Kiawah Island and Isle of Palms.
Stone Castings of Charleston has been in business for 20 years, though the Luziers bought out the company four years ago. They currently lease their nearby operational space at 1708 Pineview Road.
Future plans for the commercial site include adding a second floor to the main building and incorporating home décor items, as well as complementary pots and stone corbels, to their shoppable inventory.
“A lot of Charleston still doesn’t know that we’re here and people stumble upon us all the time,” Luzier said. “We’re really excited about the new spot because we’re going to try and use it as a reintroduction to the area and show people what we do.”
CHARLESTON — A city board was unable to decide on a development group’s request for conceptual approval to build a six-structure multifamily development in West Ashley, but the discussion made clear that the plans need to go back to the drawing board.An exchange by Charleston’s Design Review Board on Jan. 5, in addition to 81 submitted public comments and several residents who spoke out in opposition, touched on concerns over the proposed Mosby Bees Ferry’s height, design and land use.The project is prop...
CHARLESTON — A city board was unable to decide on a development group’s request for conceptual approval to build a six-structure multifamily development in West Ashley, but the discussion made clear that the plans need to go back to the drawing board.
An exchange by Charleston’s Design Review Board on Jan. 5, in addition to 81 submitted public comments and several residents who spoke out in opposition, touched on concerns over the proposed Mosby Bees Ferry’s height, design and land use.
The project is proposed at 350 Grand Oaks Blvd., off Bees Ferry Road and behind a Harris Teeter supermarket and other businesses in the West Ashley Circle Center shopping complex. It calls for 380 units with 36 townhouses, along with separate garages, a clubhouse and a pool.
“I think even at a height scale and massing, I struggle to support it…,” board member David Meeks said.
No decision was made at Monday’s meeting because developer Middleburg Communities first needs approval from a city zoning board to cut down a number of protected grand trees on the 28-acre property. That determination would impact site design and only then could the project go before the Design Review Board.
But given how many residents weighed in — the applicants waited more than two hours to speak — the city panel was open to discussing the project.
The property has been owned by Bees Resources LP since 1994, according to county land records, and it includes eight acres of wetlands. The site zoned as miscellaneous commercial area.
Middleburg’s proposed apartment buildings would have a maximum height of 55 feet. Plans also call for 589 parking spaces and 25 garages.
Katie Burke, an architect with Cline Design, presented details of the project at the meeting on behalf of the developer. She noted that the “street edge is meant to feel as residential as possible,” with heights increasing inward.
She added the idea is to make a walkable community that will “echo some kind of Lowcountry vernacular” with its design.
Mosby Bees Ferry would back up to Long Savannah Road, the future main thoroughfare for 4,500 homes planned for the neighboring Long Savanna development. More than 20 years in the making, Long Savanna will be broken up into three main parts: a city park, a county park and a 1,200-acre residential area spread over 10 neighborhoods.
Several hundred more homes are planned along a 5-mile stretch of Bees Ferry Road. While traffic was a major feedback theme, the Design Review board said its oversight is limited to the design elements only.
Of the 81 public comments submitted, most focused on concerns that fall outside the panel’s purview. These included land use, stormwater and flooding.
But some noted the buildings felt too tall, and others requested more trees be preserved to serve as buffers. One comment requested better screens for garages and trash cans from the public roadway while another asked the palette of the apartments match the rainbow-hued townhomes nearby.
Frank Ricker, a retired doctor who lives in Grand Oaks, said he moved into the neighborhood because of its “modest” one- and two-level homes and winding roads around ponds and trees.
The Mosby project would require clearing out a huge swath of forest.
“What concerns me is what happens to Charleston. Developers come in … and they just dump these big buildings on us, and these buildings are out of context with the architecture of the rest of the community,” he said.
While congestion was not up for consideration, Ricker said it’s hard to overlook the 400 cars that would add to the already brutal traffic on roads in and around Grand Oaks.
“It’s overdevelopment,” he said.
Charlie Strickland, another resident of Grand Oaks, said he passes by the proposed site almost daily. His said the design does not match the rest of the community that he’s lived in for 20 years.
He asked that the board consider the residents who have to view the project daily, not the developers.
“They don’t live here,” he said.
The board recommended that before returning, the developer review a number of aspects, including strengthening the base of the apartment buildings with a brick water table, adjusting the colors of the pool house, pushing the pickleball courts away from the parking lot to allow for more greenspace and walking paths, and adding more details to the townhome entrances.
Burke did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the timeline on the project.
Vienna, Va.-based Middleburg said on its website that it has acquired, developed and financed more than 32,000 multifamily housing units since 2004 with a total value exceeding $4.5 billion.
Locally, the company built the Mosby Ingleside apartment complex near Interstate 26 and U.S. Highway 78 North Charleston and Hamlet Maybank, a single-family rental community on Johns Island.
New development aims to reduce traffic by bringing retail closer to growing residential areasWEST ASHLEY, S.C. (WCSC) — City officials are moving forward with plans to expand commercial development in outer West Ashley, targeting an area between Bees Ferry Road and Glenn McConnell Parkway.The Charleston City Council approved the first reading of an ordinance Tuesday night for a planned unit development in what developers call “The Wedge” area of outer West Ashley.“The city has really been trying...
WEST ASHLEY, S.C. (WCSC) — City officials are moving forward with plans to expand commercial development in outer West Ashley, targeting an area between Bees Ferry Road and Glenn McConnell Parkway.
The Charleston City Council approved the first reading of an ordinance Tuesday night for a planned unit development in what developers call “The Wedge” area of outer West Ashley.
“The city has really been trying to focus on bringing more commercial development into that area because with Grand Oaks, Carolina Bay, and the Bees Ferry corridor, we feel like there’s enough heads in beds to finally really have a nice commercial component for outer West Ashley,” Karl Brady, Charleston City Councilmember for District 5, said.
Documents show there are 85,000 residential units within a five-mile radius of West Ashley Circle. The area currently has an established Walmart and other services, but Brady said the development aims to fill the remaining section with additional retail and commercial purposes.
The planned unit development proposes three land use districts: the Outparcel District, the Financial District, and the Commercial District. The plan combines general offices and businesses with walkability to existing locations.
Brady said the development addresses the city’s goal of creating work nodes where people can live, shop and potentially work in the same area.
City officials said traffic complaints are the top concern they receive from residents. The commercial expansion aims to reduce traffic along Sam Rittenberg Boulevard and other main West Ashley arteries by bringing grocery stores and other services closer to residential areas.
“The traffic is just getting worse and worse by the day,” West Ashley resident Carter Souris said.
Some residents said they welcome the convenience of closer commercial options despite concerns about rapid development.
“It’s a lot better because then it’s quicker to drive through down here, even though the distanc,e because of how long you’d have to sit in traffic,” Max Lee, another West Ashley resident, said.
The ordinance must complete the regular approval process before moving forward.
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) — A homeless encampment located about a hundred yards off Ashley Hall Road is now being cleared, as outreach workers say it’s part of a growing homelessness trend across the Lowcountry.Personal belongings remain scattered throughout the area, including clothing, shoes, and bedding. Crews with the HOPE Resource Center say the site is currently in the process of being addressed through outreach efforts.The encampment is one of six her organization has worked to address so far this year, reflect...
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) — A homeless encampment located about a hundred yards off Ashley Hall Road is now being cleared, as outreach workers say it’s part of a growing homelessness trend across the Lowcountry.
Personal belongings remain scattered throughout the area, including clothing, shoes, and bedding. Crews with the HOPE Resource Center say the site is currently in the process of being addressed through outreach efforts.
The encampment is one of six her organization has worked to address so far this year, reflecting what she describes as a broader rise in homelessness across the region, according to Executive Director LaTosha Jenkins-Fludd.
The encampment is located off North Woodmere Drive. Jenkins-Fludd says sites like this often form so people can remain together, particularly families or couples who want to avoid being separated.
A recent state report shows more than 450 people are experiencing homelessness across the Lowcountry, representing an estimated 14 percent increase from last year.
Jenkins-Fludd says those numbers align with what the HOPE Resource Center is seeing firsthand, including noticeable increases in unhoused seniors, women, and children. She says many people living in encampments are dealing with a range of challenges, including eviction, mental health struggles, terminal illness, or transitioning out of foster care.
“Usually when we’re made aware of an encampment, we engage with it using our own outreach specialists here in the City of Charleston,” Jenkins-Fludd said. “We go out and ask people how we can help — whether that’s access to showers, a hot meal, laundry services or case management for housing.”
She added that not everyone is immediately receptive to help, and that the organization works closely with mental health partners to address deeper needs.
The HOPE Resource Center is open four days a week and offers hot showers, a hot breakfast, and case management services. Those in need of assistance are encouraged to reach out for help.
WEST ASHLEY — Two years after an Indian restaurant that was a favorite of locals shut down for a complete remodel and rebuild, it’s finally eyeing a reopening date.The only hold up? The building still needs interior walls and equipment.Balvinder Banga originally expected the overhaul of Nirlep at 908 Savannah Highway to take about seven months. Instead, the project is nearing the two-year mark.She’s now hopeful the fully rebuilt space will be ready by early 2026, ideally in January.As part of the...
WEST ASHLEY — Two years after an Indian restaurant that was a favorite of locals shut down for a complete remodel and rebuild, it’s finally eyeing a reopening date.
The only hold up? The building still needs interior walls and equipment.
Balvinder Banga originally expected the overhaul of Nirlep at 908 Savannah Highway to take about seven months. Instead, the project is nearing the two-year mark.
She’s now hopeful the fully rebuilt space will be ready by early 2026, ideally in January.
As part of the refresh, Banga unveiled a new logo on the outside of the Charleston building featuring an Indian man wearing sunglasses — a visual cue, the owner said, to clearly signal that Nirlep serves Indian cuisine.
The logo and the refreshed interior will be the most notable changes to the dining experience.
“It will be the same menu, same everything,” Banga said. That includes Nirlep’s popular lunch buffet.
Nirlep closed at the end of 2023 after persistent issues with the aging structure, particularly its plumbing, Banga said.
What followed was a full demolition down to the slab. The new building will feature a larger kitchen, two clay ovens — one for the restaurant’s variety of tandoori-roti breads and another for chicken — as well as a bar with seating and a semi-private dining room that can hold about 20 guests.
Banga is also considering adding outdoor seating behind the building.
Many longtime staff members plan to return, and Banga will remain in the kitchen cooking her secret-sauce chicken tandoori, spicy Krahi chicken and chicken tikki masala.
She and her husband, Dilawar Banga, first opened Nirlep in 2002, naming it after their son. They purchased the building in 2008 for $485,000, according to county records.
Despite construction delays, customer demand hasn’t waned. Banga said diners as far as Summerville continue to ask when Nirlep will reopen. All of the restaurant’s new furniture is sitting in a warehouse, ready to be moved in once the renovations are complete.
Nirlep’s return comes as Charleston’s Indian dining scene continues to grow.
In recent years the Lowcountry area has welcomed Spice Palette in Mount Pleasant, Ma’am Saab, the Pakistani restaurant and cocktail bar from the owners of the more casual Malika Canteen in Mount Pleasant, and most recently, Riviat, a higher-end Indian restaurant which opened in the Cannonborough/Elliotborough neighborhood in September.