In San Francisco, crush injuries commonly occur in environments with tight spaces and shared circulation:
- Construction and retrofit sites (staging areas, hoisting zones, confined work bays, and equipment used in narrow corridors)
- Warehouse and logistics operations (forklift activity, pallet movement, dock equipment, and compact storage layouts)
- Transit-adjacent work zones (maintenance areas near rail corridors, loading/unloading tied to schedules, and high traffic visibility constraints)
- Commercial buildings and mixed-use properties (loading areas, service entrances, equipment rooms, and maintenance work in older structures)
These settings often involve multiple parties—an employer, a contractor, a property owner, a equipment provider, or even a maintenance vendor. The legal work is figuring out who had control of safety, who maintained equipment, and whose procedures failed.


