Hammond sits at the I-12 / I-55 interchange in Tangipahoa Parish, the freight crossroads between New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and the I-55 corridor north toward Jackson and Memphis. Southeastern Louisiana University drives constant campus and food-service traffic, while Tangipahoa's strawberry, dairy, and timber operations generate dense seasonal agricultural runs. Add hurricane-evacuation surge weeks and the constant Gulf-humidity stress, and you get a freight profile defined by water, weather, and crossroads geography.
Hammond is the largest city in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, United States, located 45 miles (72 km) east of Baton Rouge and 45 miles (72 km) northwest of New Orleans. Its population was 20,019 in the 2010 U.S. census, and 21,359 at the 2020 population estimates program.
Hammond sits at the convergence of I-12 (the Baton Rouge-to-Slidell east-west) and I-55 (the New Orleans-to-Memphis north-south), a position that makes it one of the most-trafficked truck-stop clusters in southeast Louisiana. When a Class 8 truck loses cooling on the long I-55 stretch through the Manchac Swamp in August, the breakdown is high-humidity, high-stakes, and limited-pullout. Road Rescue Network's Hammond vendors run hot-weather protocols May through September and stage units at the I-12 / I-55 interchange so they can dispatch fast in either direction.
Hammond's freight economy runs on a diverse mix: Cardinal Health pharmaceutical outbound, Elmer Chocolate confectionery freight, Coca-Cola beverage distribution, and the agricultural runs out of the Tangipahoa strawberry and dairy belt. The breakdown profile here is humidity-stress on cooling systems and rubber, ice-storm closures during the rare January cold snaps, and the unique chaos of hurricane-evacuation traffic that fills both interstates the moment a Gulf storm enters the cone. Our local network is built around shops that have run hurricane Ida, Katrina, and the 2016 floods.
Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching a refrigerated load from the New Orleans port headed up I-55 to the Midwest, an owner-operator hauling strawberries out of Ponchatoula in March, or a national carrier whose driver got stuck in evacuation traffic, the closest verified Road Rescue Network vendor is reached through a single phone call. Coordination with Louisiana State Police on hurricane closures, ETA confirmation during severe weather events, and direct fleet billing are handled by our 24/7 operations team.