Wake Forest sits between growing residential communities and major commuting corridors. That matters when an incident happens because:
- Work zones interact with traffic and driveways. Trucks backing up, deliveries, and equipment movement can create “struck-by” and fall hazards that witnesses describe differently depending on where they were standing.
- Subcontractors change quickly. One company may control the overall site, while another controls the specific task (scaffolding, roofing, concrete, electrical). Claims can stall if responsibility isn’t pinned down early.
- Neighborhood construction is often close to daily life. If the accident occurred near sidewalks, entrances, or parking areas used by workers and visitors, the record may include different gate logs, delivery schedules, or incident reporting practices.
These are solvable issues—but they require prompt, organized fact development.


