Wisconsin
City Coverage

Green Bay, WI.

Green Bay sits at the head of the bay where the Fox River meets Lake Michigan and is the region's primary I-43 / US-41 freight pivot — the natural staging point between Milwaukee's industrial belt and the Upper Peninsula's iron and timber freight. The Port of Green Bay, the western Great Lakes' largest commercial port north of Milwaukee, moves cement, salt, and limestone to lake freighters all season. The Fox River paper-mill cluster — the densest paper-products manufacturing concentration in North America — drives a 24/7 inbound chemical and outbound paper-roll freight profile, and the GBP intermodal yard ties into the Heartland Corridor double-stack lane.

4
Vendors on-call now
41 min
Average dispatch ETA
120
Calls last 30 days
24/7
Always available
Interstate Coverage

Green Bay WI Freight Corridors & Interstate Service Coverage

Each corridor has a dedicated breakdown landing page with service zones, exits, and recent dispatched jobs.

Interstate 43 shield

Interstate 43

6 exits in Green Bay

Green Bay's main Milwaukee-bound freight artery — Beloit through Milwaukee up the lakefront to Green Bay. Heavy paper-products and intermodal volume; common service zones at the De Pere (Exit 175) and Manitowoc Avenue (Exit 187) interchanges. Subject to lake-effect snow closures December-March.

US Route 41 / I-41 shield

US Route 41 / I-41

8 exits in Green Bay

Wisconsin's western spine — Milwaukee through Fond du Lac and Oshkosh to Green Bay and on to the UP. Now upgraded to I-41 along most of the corridor; carries the bulk of paper-mill outbound freight south.

US Route 141 shield

US Route 141

4 exits in Green Bay

Northern corridor from Green Bay through Oconto, Crivitz, and into the UP at Iron Mountain. Heavy timber, ore, and paper-supply freight; brutal winter conditions on the Marinette County stretch.

WI-29

Wisconsin Highway 29

5 exits in Green Bay

East-west spine across central Wisconsin — Green Bay through Wausau to Eau Claire and the Twin Cities. Heavy regional manufacturing and dairy-products freight; common service zones at the WI-32 (Pulaski) and US-45 (Wittenberg) interchanges.

WI-172

Wisconsin Highway 172

7 exits in Green Bay

South Green Bay bypass tying I-43 to US-41. Heavy industrial-park freight to the Lambeau Field and Ashwaubenon corridors. Common service zones at the Ashland Ave and Mason St interchanges.

WI-57

Wisconsin Highway 57

5 exits in Green Bay

Door Peninsula corridor north from Green Bay through Sturgeon Bay. Heavy resort-supply and shipbuilding freight; brutal lake-effect exposure November-April.

City Profile

Green Bay WI Trucking & Freight Industry Overview

Green Bay sits at the head of the bay where the Fox River meets Lake Michigan and is the region's primary I-43 / US-41 freight pivot — the natural staging point between Milwaukee's industrial belt and the Upper Peninsula's iron and timber freight. The Port of Green Bay, the western Great Lakes' largest commercial port north of Milwaukee, moves cement, salt, and limestone to lake freighters all season. The Fox River paper-mill cluster — the densest paper-products manufacturing concentration in North America — drives a 24/7 inbound chemical and outbound paper-roll freight profile, and the GBP intermodal yard ties into the Heartland Corridor double-stack lane.

Green Bay is a city in Brown County, Wisconsin, United States, and its county seat. It is located along the Green Bay inlet at the mouth of the Fox River on Lake Michigan. With a population of 107,395 at the 2020 census, it is the third-most populous city in Wisconsin and third-most populous city on Lake Michigan. The Green Bay metropolitan area has an estimated 335,000 residents.

Green Bay's freight economy runs on the Fox River paper mills, the Port of Green Bay, and the I-43 / US-41 / US-141 freight pivot that ties northeastern Wisconsin into the Milwaukee-Chicago corridor. When a Class 8 truck breaks down on US-41 carrying jumbo paper rolls out of the Georgia-Pacific Broadway mill, every minute it sits is a converter-customer schedule slipping somewhere from Memphis to Toronto. Road Rescue Network's Green Bay vendors are on-call 24/7, with average dispatch-to-arrival times we publish because we measure every call.

The mechanics in Green Bay who handle heavy-duty calls are built for what northeastern Wisconsin throws at them: brutal winter cold that drops to -10°F before windchill, lake-effect snow off Lake Michigan that hits the Door Peninsula and the I-43 corridor, salt-corrosion that eats brake systems and air-line fittings, and a paper-mill freight calendar that doesn't slow down for weather. Our local techs carry chains, methanol-injection kits, air-dryer rebuild parts, and salt-corrosion-grade fasteners in every truck — and they know which mill gates accept after-hours service trucks without a 30-minute wait.

Anyone who's dispatched a truck through northeastern Wisconsin in January knows the call you don't want — a Lake Michigan band catches the I-43 corridor at Manitowoc, drops six inches per hour, and the temperature is -8°F with a 35 mph wind. Whether you're a fleet manager dispatching from Chicago with a load stranded at the Pilot in De Pere, or an owner-operator on US-41 outside Suamico, the closest verified, insurance-current vendor in our network is reached through a single phone call. Coordination, dispatch, and ETA confirmation are handled by Road Rescue Network's 24/7 operations team.