Tucker’s mix of residential development and commercial growth means jobsite conditions can change quickly—partly because projects are phased, deliveries arrive on schedules, and work areas may be reconfigured as crews rotate.
That matters for your case because insurers and defense teams may argue that:
- the hazard was temporary or obvious,
- another contractor controlled the area at the time,
- the injury was caused by your own actions,
- or the timeline doesn’t match the medical record.
A Tucker construction injury case often turns on what was happening on that specific day, who had control of the work area, and what safety documentation exists for that phase of the project.


