Aerials & Lifts
Description
Access complex elevations with a fleet engineered for stability and precision reach. From articulating booms for difficult-to-access overhead work to…
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Access complex elevations with a fleet engineered for stability and precision reach. From articulating booms for difficult-to-access overhead work to…

Achieve structural integrity with industrial-grade finishing and compaction solutions designed for the toughest site requirements. Whether you are prepping a…

Our earthmoving fleet provides the breakout force and hydraulic power necessary for rapid site development and excavation. From compact units…

Maximize your material handling efficiency with our comprehensive fleet of industrial and rough-terrain forklifts, engineered to deliver powerful lifting performance…

Equip your project with professional-grade tools designed for durability and high-torque performance across all trades. This comprehensive category provides the…

Maintain critical climate control and air quality with our high-capacity heating, cooling, and ventilation units. Engineered to handle large-scale commercial…

Transform raw land and maintain expansive commercial properties with our high-performance turf and timber management equipment. From heavy-duty brush clearing…

Streamline mechanical and electrical installations with specialized tools for threading, bending, and routing. Our inventory is built to handle heavy-wall…

Ensure 24/7 site productivity with dependable power distribution and high-intensity lighting solutions. From towable generators for remote sites to LED…

Deploy high-volume fluid management and consistent pneumatic power with our industrial pumps and compressors. Whether you are dewatering a major…

Mitigate jobsite risks and ensure site accessibility with our professional-grade safety and access solutions. This category includes everything from trench…

Optimize your logistics and site organization with rugged storage containers and high-capacity hauling solutions. Our weather-resistant containers protect valuable assets…

Achieve structural-grade bonds with our versatile fleet of portable and industrial welding units. Designed for precision and durability in the…
The Wheatland location of REIC Rentals covers more construction territory than most single locations in our network. From Torrington at the Nebraska border in the southeast, west through Wheatland to Douglas and Casper, south through Laramie and Rawlins to the Colorado border, and northeast to Gillette in the heart of the Powder River Basin, this single location serves a swath of Wyoming that spans two mountain ranges, the North Platte River drainage, the Powder River Basin, and the high plains between them. Understanding what makes this territory a coherent market requires understanding what Wyoming’s landscape actually produces, and the answer, beyond the ranching and fossil fuel extraction that defined its first century, is increasingly wind.
Wyoming has more Class 6 and Class 7 wind resources, the highest quality commercial wind, than almost any other state in the country. The high plains between the Laramie Range and the Black Hills, the Medicine Bow country south of Casper, and the corridor in which our Wheatland location sits are among the most productive wind energy development sites in North America. The renewable energy construction that has followed this resource is transforming the eastern Wyoming high plains in ways the region has not seen since the railroad came through in the 1860s.
REIC Rentals in Wheatland serves this territory with a full equipment catalog built for the demanding construction conditions of the Wyoming spine. We have the full REIC Rentals network behind this location for anything beyond our local inventory.
Our Wheatland location covers the full eastern Wyoming corridor. Torrington, Guernsey, and the Nebraska border area anchor the southeast. Wheatland and the North Platte Valley sit at the center. Douglas and Converse County connect the agricultural east to the energy infrastructure of the north. Casper is the territory’s largest city and its commercial hub. Laramie and the university corridor define the southwest. Rawlins and the I-80 high plains mark the edge of the Colorado border reach. Gillette and the Powder River Basin close the loop to the northeast. Each of these markets has a distinct economic character, and the construction equipment needs that follow from it.
Wind energy is the fastest-growing construction market in the Wyoming spine territory, and it shows no sign of slowing. Turbine foundation and pad construction on the Medicine Bow, Laramie, and Converse County wind farms involves large-footprint concrete foundations in challenging terrain with variable rock and soil conditions requiring earthmoving equipment tailored to the scale and access limitations of wind farm sites. Access road construction and maintenance for wind farm sites on the high plains supports turbine siting on exposed ridges and upland plateaus throughout the project’s operational life. Generator primary power for remote wind farm construction sites where utility service is unavailable during the construction phase is standard equipment on these projects, because wind farm sites, by definition, are in areas with the best wind resource and the least existing infrastructure. Collection system and substation construction supporting wind farm development involves the full range of civil infrastructure equipment from earthmoving through concrete construction.
Civil infrastructure across the Wyoming spine corridor is a sustained construction market: highway and bridge maintenance on I-25 and I-80, the US highway network serving eastern Wyoming, and rural road infrastructure connecting high plains communities. Government facility construction at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, the Wyoming state institutions in the Rawlins corridor, and the federal facilities distributed across the eastern Wyoming territory rounds out the institutional market. UW’s construction and renovation programs are an institutional anchor for Laramie’s construction market. Casper’s commercial and government construction market reflects both the energy economy that has historically driven it and the diversification into commercial, healthcare, and residential development that has followed population stabilization. Gillette and the Powder River Basin’s construction market remains the most active coal and energy infrastructure construction territory in Wyoming, with the transition dynamics in the basin creating both facility decommissioning and new energy infrastructure construction. Torrington and the southeast Wyoming agricultural and rural community construction market have distinct construction needs tied to the North Platte River irrigation system and the grain and livestock economy.
Jet Heat flameless heaters are essential equipment for construction in a territory that includes some of the coldest and windiest construction environments in the continental United States. The Wyoming high plains between the Laramie Range and the Black Hills are exposed to Arctic air masses and sustained winds that create severe wind chill conditions throughout winter. Construction heating in this territory is not a seasonal consideration; it is a year-round operational planning requirement for any enclosed construction phase.
Cold-weather concrete curing across the Wyoming spine requires heating plans that account for high plains winds and cold, rather than just ambient temperature readings. Wind farm foundation pours, bridge deck construction, and building slabs across this territory all require temperature-maintained curing plans built for actual conditions. Laramie sits at an elevation of 7,200 feet, the highest-elevation city in Wyoming, and construction heating there must account for the altitude’s effect on equipment performance and on the rate of heat loss from enclosed spaces.
Central Washington winters are cold, dry, and windy. Temperatures regularly drop below zero, and the region’s exposure to continental weather patterns means cold snaps can be severe and sustained. Our Jet Heat flameless heaters deliver high-output, flameless heat that enclosed construction demands in these conditions: clean air, high static pressure for duct runs, and no fire watch requirements. Winter concrete curing in the basin requires sustained temperature maintenance that accounts for the region’s extreme overnight lows and persistent wind.
The scale of the Wheatland territory and the specific demands of high-plains renewable energy construction create a market that cannot be effectively served by equipment partners operating from Cheyenne, Denver, or Billings. Response times across the Wyoming spine in winter conditions, with the road conditions and access limitations that high-plains winters create, require local equipment availability and local knowledge of the construction environments involved. A generator that fails at a wind farm construction site in Converse County at minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit needs a response measured in hours, not days. The renewable energy transition in eastern Wyoming is also creating construction demand at a pace the region has not experienced before. Wind farm development programs are large, long-duration, and equipment-intensive, and the contractors winning this work need an equipment partner who can supply it at scale.
Our Wheatland location sits at the center of the territory’s highway network, on I-25 and US-26. Torrington is 39 miles southeast on US-26. Douglas is 54 miles north on I-25. Casper is approximately 89 miles north on I-25. Laramie is approximately 61 miles southwest on I-25. Rawlins is approximately 119 miles southwest on I-80. Gillette is approximately 157 miles northeast via I-90. For wind farm sites off paved highways, we coordinate delivery routing with your project management team to account for access road conditions and construction site logistics.
Can you support wind farm construction in the Medicine Bow and Laramie Range area?
Yes. Renewable energy construction in the Medicine Bow, Converse County, and Laramie Range wind corridors is a primary project type for our Wheatland location. We provide turbine foundation earthmoving and concrete equipment, generator primary power for remote sites, lighting for extended construction schedules, and heating for enclosed construction and concrete curing in the high-plains winter environment.
Can you serve Casper and the Casper metro from Wheatland?
Yes. Casper is approximately 89 miles north on I-25 and is within our standard delivery territory on regular scheduled rotations. Casper’s commercial, healthcare, and energy infrastructure construction market is active, and we deliver the full equipment catalog with lead time appropriate for the distance.
Can you support construction at the University of Wyoming in Laramie?
Yes. Government and education facility construction at the University of Wyoming is within our delivery territory. UW construction has the campus access and schedule coordination requirements typical of university construction programs, and our team plans around these constraints as part of standard project support.
Do you serve Gillette and the Powder River Basin?
Yes. Gillette is approximately 157 miles northeast on I-25 and I-90 and is at the outer range of our territory. With appropriate lead time, we deliver to Gillette and the Powder River Basin. The energy infrastructure construction and community construction in Gillette and Campbell County are within our service territory.
How do you handle winter deliveries on the Wyoming high plains?
Wyoming high-plains winter deliveries require the same planning discipline as all remote high-plains operations. Our team monitors road conditions, checks with Wyoming DOT on pass and highway closures, and coordinates delivery windows that avoid the worst driving conditions. We do not attempt deliveries in white-out conditions on I-80 or US-26, and we communicate clearly about weather-driven schedule adjustments rather than sending drivers into conditions that compromise equipment and people.
What is your response time for wind farm equipment failures in remote Converse or Platte County locations?
Remote high-plains response times are longer than metro response times, and we are honest about that. Travel from Wheatland to a remote Converse County wind farm site can take 90 minutes or more, depending on road conditions. Our 24/7 support line is active, our response plan starts the moment you call, and we provide realistic timing expectations from the first conversation. For critical equipment failures on construction programs with hard timelines, we discuss contingency plans as part of the project setup, not after the first emergency.