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When you’re renovating a 150-year-old summer cottage in the Rockville Historic District, the last thing you need is a dumpster company that cracks your aged concrete driveway and hands you a bill full of charges you never agreed to. A roll off container handles the debris load those projects actually produce — old plaster, hardwood flooring, period fixtures, storm-damaged decking — and we deliver it with protective boards placed under every container, on every single job, at no extra cost.
Rockville’s location at the end of Maybank Highway means your property is 22 miles from Charleston and accessible by exactly one road. That’s not a problem for a company that knows the SC 700 corridor and serves Wadmalaw Island as standard territory. Your contractor crew doesn’t have to stand around waiting on a driver who’s never heard of Bohicket Creek.
The other thing that changes when you book with us: you stop guessing. Automatic confirmations, delivery reminders, pickup alerts, and a final notification when your load hits the landfill — you know exactly what’s happening at every stage. For a homeowner coordinating a serious renovation on an island property, that kind of visibility isn’t a bonus feature. It’s the baseline you should have always expected.
We’re a local, owner-operated roll off dumpster rental company serving Charleston County — which means Rockville, Wadmalaw Island, and every mile of Maybank Highway in between are home territory, not an edge case. Hasan Coskun runs the operation personally. You can reach him directly. He knows the routes, he knows the equipment, and he’s not going to dispatch an unfamiliar driver to a gated plantation community on Wadmalaw Island and hope for the best.
This isn’t a national aggregator brokering your job to whoever’s available that day. In a community as small and tight-knit as Rockville — where 141 residents know each other and word travels fast — that accountability matters in a way it doesn’t in larger markets.
Our pricing is published, flat, and complete. One rate covers delivery, pickup, and disposal. The only potential extras are weight overages and extra rental days, and both are explained clearly before you confirm your order — not discovered on the back end of your invoice.

You book online. The whole process takes a few minutes — choose your container size, pick your delivery date, enter your Rockville address, and confirm. No phone tag, no generic contact forms, no waiting on a callback. If you need same-day delivery and your order is in before noon, that’s available too.
On delivery day, our driver heads down SC 700 through Johns Island and across Wadmalaw Island with the container and the protective boards already loaded. The boards go down before the container comes off the truck — your driveway surface is protected before the roll off ever touches the ground. If your property is in one of the gated communities on Wadmalaw Island, like Polly Point Plantation or Longcreek Plantation, that coordination is handled ahead of time. Nothing gets left to chance on a single-access-road delivery.
From there, you load the container on your timeline. When you’re ready for pickup — or when your rental period ends — you’ll get a notification before the driver heads your way, and another one once your load has been processed at the landfill. The Town of Rockville’s own UDO governs what’s permitted on properties within town limits, and if your project involves placement near a road or right-of-way, we can walk you through what’s needed before the truck rolls. The process is designed to be straightforward from the first click to the final confirmation.

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A roll off container is not the same thing as a standard dumpster. The open top handles long, bulky material that won’t fit anywhere else — aged lumber, structural framing, full sheets of old roofing. The rear door swings open the full width of the container, so you’re walking heavy debris straight in rather than lifting it over a high side wall. For the kind of renovation and restoration work that Rockville’s antebellum and Victorian housing stock demands, that walk-in access isn’t a convenience — it’s what makes the job physically manageable.
The 20 yard roll off dumpster rental is the most common choice for residential renovation and estate cleanout projects in Rockville, SC. It handles the volume of a full room gut, a roof replacement, or a multi-room cleanout without requiring a second haul. If your project is larger — a full structural renovation on a historic property, a significant post-storm cleanup along Bohicket Creek, or a major landscaping overhaul on a Wadmalaw Island estate — sizing up is worth the conversation before you book.
Every roll off rental from us includes delivery to your Rockville property, the full rental period, pickup, and disposal, all in one flat rate. Charleston County’s Bees Ferry Road Landfill does not accept construction and demolition waste from private haulers, which means your debris needs to go through a licensed waste hauler regardless — we handle that end of it, and it’s already factored into your price. Standard prohibited materials apply: no hazardous waste, paint, chemicals, tires, or electronics. Older Rockville homes may contain legacy materials like lead-based paint or asbestos, which require a separate disposal pathway — if that’s relevant to your project, it’s worth flagging before you load.

Yes — Rockville and the full Wadmalaw Island corridor are part of our standard Charleston County service area. The 22-mile route down SC 700 from Charleston through Johns Island to Rockville is familiar territory, not a special request. There are no rural delivery surcharges or trip fees added because of your location. Your flat rate covers delivery to your Rockville address the same way it covers delivery anywhere else in the service area.
The single-road access via Maybank Highway is something we account for in scheduling. If your property has limited driveway space, a raised historic foundation, or sits within a gated community on Wadmalaw Island, those details are worked out before the truck leaves — not discovered when the driver arrives. Same-day delivery is available for orders placed before noon, which matters when a contractor crew is already on-site and waiting.
The two most important differences are the rear door and the open top. A roll off container has a door at the back that swings open the full width of the unit — you walk material straight in at ground level instead of lifting it over a high side wall. For heavy, bulky renovation debris like the kind generated by a historic home gut in Rockville — old plaster, thick hardwood flooring, aged structural lumber — that walk-in access makes a real physical difference over the course of a project.
The open top means you can load long, awkward material that would never fit in a standard enclosed container. Roll offs also sit on steel wheels, which is why driveway protection boards matter — those wheels can crack older concrete and leave permanent impressions in asphalt, especially in the Lowcountry’s heat. We place protective boards under every container on every delivery as a standard practice, not an upsell. If you’re working on a historic Rockville property with aged or brick surfaces, that’s not a small detail.
The 20 yard roll off dumpster is the most common choice for residential renovation and estate cleanout projects in Rockville, SC. It handles the debris load from a full room gut, a roof replacement, or a whole-house cleanout without requiring a second haul. If you’re doing a smaller interior project — a bathroom remodel, a single-room renovation — a 10 yard container may be sufficient. If you’re managing a major structural renovation on a historic property, a large post-storm cleanup along Bohicket Creek, or clearing out a multi-acre estate on Wadmalaw Island, a 30 yard container is worth considering.
The type of material matters as much as the volume. Dense debris like concrete, brick, or tile fills weight limits faster than lighter material like drywall or wood framing. If you’re renovating a home in the Rockville Historic District, the debris profile is often heavier than a standard modern renovation — older construction materials are dense, and a container that looks half-full can be at its weight limit. When in doubt, it’s worth a quick conversation before you book. Choosing the right size upfront is cheaper than ordering a second container mid-project.
This is one of the most common concerns from homeowners in Rockville, and it’s a legitimate one. Roll off containers ride on steel wheels, and those wheels can crack older concrete, leave impressions in asphalt, and damage shell or brick surfaces — especially in the Lowcountry’s warm, humid conditions where asphalt softens and aged concrete is more brittle than it looks. On a historic property in Rockville where the driveway surface may be decades or generations old, that’s a real risk with the wrong company.
We place protective boards under every container on every delivery — no exceptions, no extra charge, no request required. The boards distribute the container’s weight across a wider surface area and prevent direct contact between the steel wheels and your driveway. This isn’t something you have to ask for or negotiate. It’s how every delivery is done. For homeowners with high-value historic properties, it’s one of the clearest signals that the company delivering to your property actually respects what they’re pulling into.
Standard prohibited materials apply regardless of location: no hazardous waste, paint cans, chemicals, motor oil, batteries, tires, electronics, or flammable materials. These items require separate disposal pathways and cannot go into a roll off container. For most renovation and cleanout projects, this isn’t an issue — general construction debris, household items, furniture, roofing materials, and yard waste are all acceptable.
Where it gets more specific for Rockville is with older housing stock. Homes in the Rockville Historic District and on Wadmalaw Island that were built in the antebellum or Victorian era may contain lead-based paint, asbestos-containing materials in insulation or floor tiles, or other legacy substances that are regulated separately from standard C&D debris. If your renovation project involves disturbing those materials, they need to be handled and disposed of through a licensed abatement contractor before the debris goes into a roll off. It’s worth identifying that upfront — not after you’ve already loaded the container. We can flag this during the booking process if you’re working on a property of that age.
If the container is placed entirely on your private property — your driveway, your yard, within your lot lines — you generally don’t need a permit. Most residential deliveries in Rockville work exactly this way. The container goes on your driveway with protective boards underneath, and no permit is required.
If placement on a public street or road right-of-way is necessary, that changes. South Carolina requires a permit from the local Public Works authority for containers placed in public rights-of-way, and in Rockville, where SC 700 is the only road and some historic properties have limited or narrow driveway access, this situation does come up. The Town of Rockville also has its own Unified Development Ordinance that governs land use within town limits, which can affect where and how a container is placed on certain properties — particularly those in or adjacent to the historic district. We’re familiar with these considerations for Wadmalaw Island deliveries and can help you think through placement options before the truck arrives, so there are no compliance issues on delivery day.
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