Alexandria is the geographic center of Louisiana and the I-49 / US-71 freight pivot between Shreveport, Lafayette, and Baton Rouge. The metro carries Fort Johnson Army (Joint Readiness Training Center) supply convoys, central Louisiana agricultural freight (cotton, sugarcane, soybeans, sweet potatoes), and the storm-surge spillover that runs north from the Gulf coast every hurricane season. The Alexandria International Airport / former England Air Force Base is now a multimodal industrial park anchoring contract logistics for the I-49 corridor.
Alexandria is the ninth-largest city in the state of Louisiana and is the parish seat of and the largest city in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, United States. It lies on the south bank of the Red River in almost the exact geographic center of the state. It is the principal city of the Alexandria metropolitan area which encompasses all of Rapides and Grant parishes. Its neighboring city is Pineville. As of the 2020 census, Alexandria had a population of 45,275.
Alexandria sits at the geographic dead-center of Louisiana, where I-49 cuts north-south from Shreveport to Lafayette and US-71 carries the legacy north-south corridor from the Arkansas line to the Mississippi River bottoms. The Red River cuts the metro between Alexandria and Pineville, and the river bridges along US-165 and US-167 are routine breakdown clusters when summer humidity stresses cooling systems on a loaded Class 8. Road Rescue Network's Alexandria vendors handle this central Louisiana terrain every day.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through Alexandria during hurricane season knows the call volume changes overnight. When a named storm spins up in the Gulf, US-71 and I-49 north of the metro turn into evacuation arteries running double-direction contraflow, and the staging area at England Industrial Airpark fills with fuel tankers, generator haulers, and pole-line trucks heading south. Our local mechanics carry storm-prep kits, mobile fuel transfer rigs, and the dispatcher relationships with Louisiana State Police Troop E that make hurricane-corridor service possible.
When a Class 8 truck breaks down on I-49 northbound at the MacArthur Drive interchange in a Louisiana August afternoon, the cab climbs past 130°F before the air-conditioning catches up and the cooling fan duty cycles peg at 100%. Alexandria summer humidity sits above 80% from May through September, and DPF regen failures, charge-air-cooler leaks, and water-pump complaints cluster around the I-49 / US-167 junction at Pineville. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Houston with a truck stranded at the Procter & Gamble Pineville plant gate, or an owner-operator on US-71 toward Bunkie, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor is reached through a single call.