North Myrtle Beach construction doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Projects commonly run in environments where:
- Work happens near public routes (beach access roads, hotel entrances, and pedestrian corridors)
- Multiple subcontractors overlap on the same structure or property
- Elevated work is frequent—rooflines, balconies, renovations, and exterior maintenance
- Tourism schedules create pressure to keep sites “open” and moving quickly
That matters because scaffolding responsibility is often tied to who had control at the time—not just who was present. In many local cases, the fight isn’t about whether a fall occurred; it’s about whether safety systems were properly installed, inspected, and maintained while work continued.


