New Orleans, LA.
New Orleans sits on the Mississippi River at the convergence of the Port of New Orleans and the Port of South Louisiana, the largest tonnage port complex in the Western Hemisphere. The metro moves grain, petroleum, container, and project-cargo freight on every Class 1 railroad and on I-10, I-12, US-90, and US-61. The Twin Span over Lake Pontchartrain, the I-510 / Chalmette industrial corridor, and the French Quarter narrow-street restrictions define the operating envelope. Hurricane evacuation, salt-water flood damage, and 95% summer humidity stress every air-conditioning, cooling, and electrical system on the road.
Every roadside service we run in New Orleans
Featured New Orleans Service Providers
Insurance-current network vendors with verified compliance, equipment, and live availability status.
Crescent City Emergency Mobile Truck Repair
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 11
- 14 years in business
- Insurance verified
Tchoupitoulas Tire & Drayage
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 7
- 11 years in business
- Insurance verified
Twin Span 24/7 Recovery
- 24/7 dispatch
- Fleet of 11
- 12 years in business
- Insurance verified
New Orleans LA Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage
Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 10
19 exits in New Orleans
The trans-Gulf-South corridor running east-west through New Orleans, with the Twin Span crossing Lake Pontchartrain at Mile 254 and the elevated downtown segment over Claiborne Avenue. Heavy port-drayage and refining freight; the Twin Span and the Bonnet Carre Spillway segments are chronic breakdown zones during hurricane evacuations.

Interstate 12
0 exits in New Orleans
The northern bypass of Lake Pontchartrain from Slidell to Baton Rouge, the only inland alternative to I-10 during a hurricane evacuation event. Carries heavy through-truck volume avoiding the New Orleans urban core.

Interstate 510
5 exits in New Orleans
The eastern New Orleans spur connecting I-10 at Mile 244 to the Chalmette industrial corridor and the Mississippi River refining belt. Heavy refinery, chemical, and Domino Sugar truck volume in St. Bernard Parish.

Interstate 610
7 exits in New Orleans
The downtown New Orleans bypass spur from I-10 to itself, cutting through the Mid-City and Lakefront corridors. Heavy commuter truck volume; common breakdown spots at the Florida Avenue and the airport-bound exits.

US Route 90 (West Bank Expressway)
14 exits in New Orleans
The West Bank arterial paralleling I-10 from the Crescent City Connection bridge through Westwego and into the bayou parishes. Carries heavy port-drayage, oilfield-services, and Avondale Shipyard freight.

US Route 61 (Airline Hwy)
9 exits in New Orleans
The historic Mississippi River corridor from New Orleans north to Baton Rouge and up the Delta. Heavy refining, chemical, and grain-elevator truck traffic. The river-side Norco / LaPlace industrial belt is a constant service-call zone.
New Orleans LA Trucking & Freight Industry Overview
New Orleans sits on the Mississippi River at the convergence of the Port of New Orleans and the Port of South Louisiana, the largest tonnage port complex in the Western Hemisphere. The metro moves grain, petroleum, container, and project-cargo freight on every Class 1 railroad and on I-10, I-12, US-90, and US-61. The Twin Span over Lake Pontchartrain, the I-510 / Chalmette industrial corridor, and the French Quarter narrow-street restrictions define the operating envelope. Hurricane evacuation, salt-water flood damage, and 95% summer humidity stress every air-conditioning, cooling, and electrical system on the road.
New Orleans is a consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the U.S. state of Louisiana. With a population of 383,997 at the 2020 census, New Orleans is the most populous city in Louisiana, the second-most populous in the Deep South after Atlanta, and the twelfth-most populous in the Southeastern United States; the New Orleans metropolitan area, with about 1 million residents, is the 59th-most populous metropolitan area in the United States. New Orleans serves as a major port and commercial hub for the broader Gulf Coast region. The city is coextensive with Orleans Parish.
New Orleans's freight economy lives between the Port of New Orleans, the Port of South Louisiana further upriver, and the Class 1 railroad networks that converge on the Mississippi. A breakdown on the I-10 Twin Span over Lake Pontchartrain at peak shift change can ripple from the eastern parishes through every Folgers and Avondale dock by mid-morning. Road Rescue Network's southeast Louisiana vendors are pre-positioned across Orleans, Jefferson, St. Bernard, and St. Tammany parishes so we can keep moving on either side of the lake.
The mechanics in New Orleans who handle heavy-duty calls every day live with three punishments unique to the Gulf South: hurricane evacuation contraflow protocols that turn I-10 westbound into a chaos zone on a 36-hour fuse, salt-water flood damage from storm surge that shorts out wiring harnesses on a near-annual basis (the 'Katrina cycle' is now the planning horizon), and 95% summer humidity that overheats cooling systems and seizes A/C compressors every day from June through September. Our network is built around mechanics who carry humidity-grade electrical kits, salt-water rinse rigs, and a hurricane-season pre-positioning protocol you won't find north of Memphis.
Whether you are a fleet manager dispatching from Chicago with a truck stranded at the Napoleon Avenue Terminal chassis pool, or an owner-operator on US-90 trying to clear a steer-tire blowout near the West Bank Expressway before a midnight load deadline, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our New Orleans network is reached through a single phone call or service request. Coordination, dispatch, and ETA confirmation are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team.