Burbank, CA.
Burbank is the media capital's freight hub, where the Warner Bros., Disney, and NBCUniversal studios drive a steady flow of production-equipment trucks, set-build freight, and soundstage logistics. I-5 carries the main San Fernando Valley freight corridor through town, SR-134 and SR-170 tie into the studio district, and Hollywood Burbank Airport adds air-cargo support traffic. The valley's brutal summer heat and the studio production schedules make this a demanding, time-sensitive freight environment.
Every roadside service we run in Burbank
Featured Burbank Service Providers
Insurance-current network rescuers with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Media District Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 13 years in business
- Insurance verified
Verdugo Heavy Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 10
- 17 years in business
- Insurance verified
Hollywood Way Tire & Road Service
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 5
- 9 years in business
- Insurance verified
Burbank CA Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 5 (Golden State Freeway)
5 exits in Burbank
The Golden State Freeway is Burbank's main freight artery through the San Fernando Valley. The Burbank Boulevard and Buena Vista exits see heavy studio-and-airport traffic and frequent service calls.

State Route 134 (Ventura Freeway)
3 exits in Burbank
The Ventura Freeway connects Burbank's studio district to Glendale and Pasadena. Carries production-equipment and set-build freight; calls cluster near the studio-gate exits.

State Route 170 (Hollywood Freeway)
2 exits in Burbank
The Hollywood Freeway links Burbank to the central valley freight routes and the 101. A key connector for studio logistics moving across the valley.

Interstate 405
0 exits in Burbank
Reached west via SR-134, the 405 is the regional freight spine over the Sepulveda Pass toward the Westside and the 10. Burbank freight uses it for basin-wide distribution.

State Route 2 (Glendale Freeway)
0 exits in Burbank
Reached east via SR-134, the Glendale Freeway links toward the 210 and the foothill routes. Used by Burbank freight reaching the northeast valley.

US Route 101 (Ventura Freeway)
0 exits in Burbank
Reached west via SR-134/SR-170, the 101 carries valley freight toward the West Valley and Ventura County. A primary regional corridor for Burbank distribution.
Burbank CA Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
Burbank is the media capital's freight hub, where the Warner Bros., Disney, and NBCUniversal studios drive a steady flow of production-equipment trucks, set-build freight, and soundstage logistics. I-5 carries the main San Fernando Valley freight corridor through town, SR-134 and SR-170 tie into the studio district, and Hollywood Burbank Airport adds air-cargo support traffic. The valley's brutal summer heat and the studio production schedules make this a demanding, time-sensitive freight environment.
Burbank is a city in the southeastern end of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles County, California, United States. Located 7 miles (11 km) northwest of downtown Los Angeles, Burbank had a population of 105,833 as of 2025. The city was named after David Burbank, who established a sheep ranch there in 1867. Burbank consists of two distinct areas: a downtown/foothill section, in the foothills of the Verdugo Mountains, and the flatland section.
Burbank's freight economy runs on the studios, and that makes it unlike any other freight town: production-equipment rigs, grip-and-lighting trucks, set-build trailers, and soundstage logistics all run on shoot schedules that don't bend. A studio transport truck that breaks down before a load-in can hold up a whole production day, and the costs there are eye-watering. Road Rescue Network's Burbank rescuers understand the studio-logistics tempo and average dispatch-to-arrival times that beat the San Fernando Valley benchmark.
The mechanics in Burbank who handle heavy-duty calls work a mix found nowhere else, production trucks feeding Warner Bros. and Disney, air-cargo support out of Hollywood Burbank Airport, and the I-5 valley freight grind. The breakdown patterns reflect that, schedule-critical production-rig failures, summer cooling stress in the valley heat that routinely tops 100 degrees, and trailer trouble on the SR-134 and SR-170 studio connectors. Our network is built on mechanics who know the media district, not generalists who've never worked a load-in deadline.
Whether you are a fleet manager whose studio transport is stuck on the I-5 near the Burbank Boulevard exit, or an owner-operator stranded on SR-134 by the studio gates, the closest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our Burbank network is one call away. Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team handles dispatch, ETA confirmation, and the schedule-critical routing that the media district demands.