Lyndhurst construction projects often overlap with active roads, deliveries, and regular neighborhood traffic. When an injury happens near driveways, curb cuts, staging areas, or work zones, key details can disappear fast—photos get overwritten, witnesses move on, and incident narratives get simplified.
What you should do right away (practical and Ohio-focused):
- Record what you can while it’s still fresh: exact location, lighting conditions, barriers/signage present, weather, and how pedestrians or vehicles were handled.
- Preserve communications: texts/emails from supervisors, safety updates, or messages about the task that was being performed.
- Get contact info for witnesses: especially delivery personnel, site visitors, or anyone who saw the hazard before the injury.
- Request the incident report through the appropriate channels. If you can’t access it, ask an attorney to help obtain it.
These early steps matter because Ohio claims can turn on what the evidence shows about notice, control, and preventability—not just what happened.


