In suburban communities like Mount Prospect, construction projects frequently overlap with daily life—deliveries, utility work, sidewalk access, and traffic management. That means injuries can involve not only the person performing the task, but also how the work zone was controlled and communicated.
Common scenarios we see (and how they tend to affect claims):
- Struck-by incidents near active roadways or drive lanes: Even if the injury happened on-site, the case often turns on whether the work zone was adequately marked, separated, and supervised.
- Falls and trips in partially completed areas: Construction sites aren’t finished floors or clean walkways. What matters is whether the area was maintained, secured, and warning signs/barriers were used appropriately.
- Scaffolding, ladder, or elevated-work failures: These cases frequently involve training, inspection practices, and whether safety measures were actually implemented—not just promised.
- Equipment and material handling injuries: When materials are staged, moved, or lifted improperly, the question becomes who directed the work and whether safer procedures were available.
Because multiple parties may control different parts of the site, getting the early facts organized can have a direct impact on whether your claim is valued fairly.


