Wilmington’s mix of urban redevelopment, port-adjacent industry, and ongoing commercial construction means scaffolding is commonly used in tight areas—near pedestrian routes, loading zones, and streets where access and safety plans change quickly.
After a fall, that environment can complicate what happened and who controlled it. For example:
- Access points shift during the day, especially near entrances, sidewalks, and staging areas.
- Work schedules overlap (trade contractors arriving at different times), increasing the chance that safety responsibilities are split.
- Site communications are fast—texts, email updates, and short “quick checks” that later become part of the dispute.
A strong claim starts by reconstructing not just the fall, but the Wilmington worksite conditions leading up to it.


