Pompano Beach is one of Broward County's strongest industrial bases, with a dense warehouse and distribution belt stacked along I-95, the Florida Turnpike, and Powerline Road feeding the Port Everglades and PortMiami drayage networks. The TA truck stop at the Sawgrass-Turnpike interchange is a regional service anchor. Atlantic salt air corrodes hardware on the coastal fleet, summer thunderstorms flood the low underpasses, and hurricane season turns the corridor into an evacuation and recovery zone.
Pompano Beach is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. It is located along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, just north of Fort Lauderdale and 36 miles north of Miami. The nearby Hillsboro Inlet forms part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. It is a principal city of the Miami metropolitan area, which was home to 6.14 million people in 2020. As of the 2020 census, the population was 112,046, making it the sixth-largest city in Broward County, the ninth-largest city in the South Florida metropolitan area, and the 20th-largest city in Florida.
Pompano Beach's freight identity is industrial to the core: row after row of distribution centers and trucking yards lined up along Powerline Road, the Turnpike, and the I-95 frontage, feeding the South Florida drayage machine. A box truck that drops a driveline on the Atlantic Boulevard ramp at mid-morning can clog the artery that ties the warehouse belt to the interstates. Road Rescue Network's Pompano Beach rescuers stage near the I-95/Atlantic interchange so they can cover the industrial district fast.
Anyone who's run trucks through Broward knows the TA at the Sawgrass-Turnpike interchange in Pompano is a regional anchor, the full-service stop where drivers stage, fuel, and get worked on. The mechanics around it deal with the same coastal reality as the rest of the South Florida shore: salt-corroded brake hardware, crusted terminals, and connectors eaten by ocean humidity. Our network is built around techs who carry the corrosion-resistant parts the climate demands.
When the National Hurricane Center starts naming systems, Pompano Beach's coastal-industrial geography flips the dispatch board. Anyone who's worked freight here in September knows the surge: flooded underpasses along Powerline Road, downed signals on Atlantic Boulevard, and freight cramming I-95 ahead of the storm. Road Rescue Network pre-stages extra units, keeps fuel-delivery trucks loaded, and prioritizes corridor-critical recoveries the moment a system enters the cone.