For Contract and Construction Workers
Energy, infrastructure, and construction workers on rotating contracts need parks that actually accept big rigs, run 24-hour gate access, and sit within reasonable commute of the job site. Even if the job site is in the middle of nowhere.
The Permian, Bakken, and Gulf Coast construction corridors all have RV communities built around this workflow. The good ones run laundry facilities, have early-exit gates for 5 AM shifts, and keep heated water lines through the winter.
What to look for
- Pull-through sites for big rigs (no back-in gymnastics at 4 AM)
- 50-amp heavy-duty hookups
- 24/7 gate access for shift work
- Heated water lines in winter climates
- Close to job site (commute matters when OT is on the line)
Practical tips
- ·Negotiate monthly rates, not weekly. Most parks will discount for 30-day commitments.
- ·Ask about utility pass-through. Some parks include electric; others charge at individual meter rates. Can be a $100-300/month difference.
- ·Build a short list ahead of the project. You don't want to be finding housing the day the contract starts.
Communities that fit
A starting point. Open any listing for full amenities, ratings, and contact info.
Blueberry Hill RV Community
Bushnell, Florida
Indian Wells RV Community
Indio, California
55+
Baker Acres RV Community
Zephyrhills, Florida
55+
Central Park RV Community
Haines City, Florida
Flamingo Lake RV Community
Jacksonville, Florida
55+
Citrus Hill RV Community
Dade City, Florida
A note on housing.
RV Annual welcomes all renters and households. Community pages describe lifestyles, occupations, and use cases. Nothing here signals a preference or limitation based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability. Communities marked 55+ are self-designated by the operator under the Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA) and are subject to that law. See our Fair Housing statement.