Anderson, IN.
US 36 and US 35 form the primary north-south freight backbone through Anderson; combined daily heavy-vehicle traffic exceeds 1,200 rigs moving automotive parts, packaged consumer goods, and specialty food products. Nestlé Distribution Center (Anderson proper) and Red Gold Distribution Center (Alexandria, 15 miles south) push product across the upper Midwest nightly. The truck stop cluster (six facilities within 15 miles) creates a "critical service node": breakdowns here impact not just the individual driver but the entire stop operations and the 40–50 other rigs parked overnight. Any significant downtime in Anderson extends outward to supply chains serving Indianapolis, Michigan automotive plants, and Chicago distribution hubs.
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Anderson IN Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

East Broadway Street
6 exits in Anderson
East-west backbone through Anderson connecting Indianapolis to eastern Indiana and Ohio. Carries significant automotive parts and finished goods freight destined for assembly plants and eastern distribution hubs. Winter ice formation occurs earliest on this route due to north-facing bridge approaches and standing water areas. Freight volume peaks 10 PM–6 AM as overnight consolidation shipments move from Nestlé and secondary warehouses. Breakdown response on US 36 corridor is critical; RRN maintains dedicated asset pre-positioning during high-risk hours.

US 35
4 exits in Anderson
North-south artery connecting Indianapolis and South Bend, passing directly through Anderson. Carries 800+ heavy vehicles daily, particularly concentrated in 10 PM–8 AM window when overnight freight consolidation occurs at Nestlé DC. Bridge approaches north and south of Anderson are known breakdown hotspots during ice formation. I-69 merger south of Anderson creates congestion during day hours; night-time breakdown response is faster.

SR 67
8 exits in Anderson
North-south connector through Madison County, linking Anderson to smaller manufacturing centers and agricultural areas. Moderate truck traffic; breakdown response times extend 10–15 minutes beyond main corridor due to distance from major service centers. Subject to early-season spring flooding in creek crossing areas.

North Pike Street
5 exits in Anderson
East-west state route through Anderson's downtown and industrial areas, connecting to secondary warehousing and truck service facilities. Lower speed, sharper geometry increases accident and jackknife risk during adverse weather. Winter traction issues are endemic; breakdown frequency on SR 38 is 15% higher than US 36 due to grade changes and inadequate shoulder width in sections.

SR 9
4 exits in Anderson
SR 9 runs through the Anderson metro and is a common service-call corridor for the Anderson dispatch area.

Fisherburg Avenue
4 exits in Anderson
Fisherburg Avenue runs through the Anderson metro and is a common service-call corridor for the Anderson dispatch area.

SR 37
4 exits in Anderson
SR 37 runs through the Anderson metro and is a common service-call corridor for the Anderson dispatch area.

SR 109
4 exits in Anderson
SR 109 runs through the Anderson metro and is a common service-call corridor for the Anderson dispatch area.
Anderson IN Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
US 36 and US 35 form the primary north-south freight backbone through Anderson; combined daily heavy-vehicle traffic exceeds 1,200 rigs moving automotive parts, packaged consumer goods, and specialty food products. Nestlé Distribution Center (Anderson proper) and Red Gold Distribution Center (Alexandria, 15 miles south) push product across the upper Midwest nightly. The truck stop cluster (six facilities within 15 miles) creates a "critical service node": breakdowns here impact not just the individual driver but the entire stop operations and the 40–50 other rigs parked overnight. Any significant downtime in Anderson extends outward to supply chains serving Indianapolis, Michigan automotive plants, and Chicago distribution hubs.
Anderson is a city in and the county seat of Madison County, Indiana, United States. The population was 54,788 at the 2020 census. It is named after Chief William Anderson. The city is the headquarters of the Church of God and its Anderson University. Highlights of the city include the historic Paramount Theatre and the Gruenewald House.
Anderson is the county seat of Madison County and a critical logistics node in North Central Indiana, situated on the US 36 and US 35 north-south corridor connecting Indianapolis to Chicago and Michigan. The city's Nestlé Distribution Center and proximity to the Red Gold regional hub in Alexandria make Anderson a major consolidation point for food and beverage freight. With six major truck stops within a 15-mile radius—Flying J in Spiceland, Pilots in Daleville and Greenfield, Love's in Pendleton, and Petro in Gaston—Anderson anchors a critical rest-and-refuel network where carriers moving overnight loads pause, fuel up, and service their equipment.
Madison County winters are brutal: ice accumulation on US 36 and US 35 is routine January through March, visibility on state routes drops to near-zero during freezing rain events, and breakdown frequency spikes on icy bridge approaches and elevated sections of highway. The terrain around Anderson is gently rolling farmland interrupted by creek valleys; water management becomes critical during spring thaw when culvert blockage and shoulder washout create unexpected hazards. Truck stop parking lots in the area fill quickly during major winter storms, leaving stranded drivers with limited shelter and charging points. Breakdown response during white-out conditions demands dispatch discipline and vendor crews trained in low-visibility recovery.
RRN's verified network in Anderson spans the truck stop corridor and extends directly into the Nestlé distribution facility. Our dispatch team maintains relationships with mobile tire shops, diesel mechanics, and heavy-duty recovery units stationed at and between each truck stop cluster. A breakdown at Love's in Pendleton, Pilot in Daleville, or on US 35 between Anderson and Muncie triggers coordinated response within 35–45 minutes; facility-adjacent issues resolve faster. We understand that Anderson area drivers often fuel at one stop, service at another, and may break down at a third. RRN dispatch ties the entire corridor together with 24/7 coverage and asset pre-positioning.