Why Dearborn Heights Contractors Choose Temporary Over Masonry for Short-Term Boundaries
After the brutal winter of ’07 wrecked dozens of construction perimeters near Telegraph Road, we saw firsthand how masonry walls cracked under frost heave while our temporary chain link held strong. Masonry looks solid on paper, but it’s slow to build, impossible to move, and vulnerable to ground shifts common along the Rouge River in Riverside Drive. Temporary fencing? We get it up fast, so you can get back to work—whether you're securing a site near Berwyn or staging near Telegraph Commercial Corridor by the Ram’s Horn Restaurant.
- Masonry walls offer permanent security but take weeks to install and cost significantly more.
- Temporary chain link fencing goes up in hours, not days, and can be relocated as job sites shift.
- In Dearborn Heights’ variable soil and weather—especially after a freeze-thaw cycle—temporary fencing with concrete-steel bases resists tipping better than rigid masonry during early spring thaw.
| Feature | Masonry Wall | Temporary Chain Link |
|---|---|---|
| Installation Speed | Weeks | Hours |
| Relocation | Impossible | Easy with modular reconfiguration |
| Winter Resilience | Prone to cracking | Stable with wind-load resistance and zero-trip hazard bases |
