Troy anchors the Oakland County automotive supplier belt, sitting where I-75 meets the I-696 cross-county connector north of Detroit. Big Beaver Road and the Coolidge industrial spine feed a dense cluster of Tier-1 and Tier-2 auto suppliers, electronics distributors, and corporate logistics depots. Just-in-time parts runs to the Detroit Three assembly plants move through here around the clock, which makes a stalled trailer on I-75 a line-down emergency, not an inconvenience.
Troy is a city in Oakland County, Michigan, United States. A northern suburb of Detroit, Troy is located about 15 miles (24 km) north of downtown Detroit. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 87,294, making Troy the largest community in Oakland County and 13th-most populous municipality in the state.
Troy's freight economy runs on just-in-time auto parts, and the supplier yards off Rochester Road and Coolidge Highway don't tolerate a truck sitting dead in a dock lane. Road Rescue Network's Troy rescuers are on-call 24/7, carrying the air-system and electrical parts that keep a JIT run from cascading into an assembly-line stoppage downstream.
Anyone who's dispatched a truck through Oakland County in January knows the cold here bites harder than the calendar suggests. Sub-zero overnight lows turn wet brake lines into ice plugs, gel diesel without treated fuel, and freeze air tanks solid on tractors parked at the Meijer DC. Our local mechanics run methanol kits and air-dryer rebuild parts on every truck because in Troy that's a weekly call from December through February, not an edge case.
Whether you are a fleet manager routing a load down I-75 toward the Davison Freeway or an owner-operator stuck on the I-696 ramp at Crooks Road, the nearest verified, insurance-current rescuer in our Troy network is one phone call away. Dispatch, ETA confirmation, and coordination are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team so the driver can stay with the truck.