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    How Equipment Solutions Are Adapted for Remote Worksites

    Published on 30 April 2026, Thursday, 11:00 PM
    Trade Advice
    • Kennards Hire equipment setup on a remote project worksite

    Even the simplest projects can quickly become challenging when they take place in a remote location. Longer supply lines, fewer service options, limited access windows, and the pressure to get it right the first time all increase the risk of delays. When a site is hours from the nearest town, or days from a replacement part, even small issues can halt progress and increase costs.

    That’s why Kennards Hire approaches remote projects differently. We combine a large branch network, specialist support teams and the ability to establish on-site service points when required, so equipment, support and solutions are always within reach.

    1. Using the branch network to reduce downtime

    Reach is the foundation. Our branch network across Australia and New Zealand means supply and servicing don’t rely on a single depot or freight route, reducing risk from the outset.

    On remote projects, that reach supports:

    • Pre-mobilisation planning, including what arrives first, what follows and what needs backup
    • Staged deliveries to avoid overloading site laydown areas
    • Fast equipment swaps and replacements when conditions change
    • Access to specialist equipment, including power, pumps, traffic management, site accommodation and more, through dedicated teams

    It also provides a practical point of contact. When a project team is managing weather windows, road access and multiple subcontractors, the value is often not just the equipment. It’s having a clear escalation path when something changes.

    2. Planning for remote conditions

    Remote sites expose gaps in planning. On a metro job, a missing fitting or tool is an inconvenience. On a remote job, it can cost a full day.

    Effective remote mobilisation comes down to getting the basics right early. That means:

    • Confirming access conditions, including road limits, delivery routes and restricted times
    • Understanding site constraints, such as laydown, lifting points, and refuelling or charging arrangements
    • Identifying high-risk equipment, including items most likely to fail or be damaged
    • Planning backup options, including spares, alternatives or swap strategies
    • Locking in delivery sequencing so equipment arrives in the order it’s needed

    This is where specialist teams help, particularly for power, where a site’s requirements often change as construction ramps up.

    3. Pop-up branches for major remote projects

    Some remote projects are large and isolated enough that standard support models introduce unnecessary delays. In these cases, we establish pop-up branches: temporary on-site service points that hold commonly used equipment and significantly improve response times.

    This approach was applied on the Tauhara geothermal power station project near Taupō, New Zealand, where we deployed a modular on-site branch to support multiple trades across the 174MW development, ensuring faster access to equipment and less reliance on off-site logistics.

    The takeaway is simple: when the project demands it, bringing the branch closer to site reduces travel time, speeds up equipment swaps and keeps crews working when unexpected needs arise.

    4. Types of remote projects we support

    Our recent projects highlight the range of remote work we support, from renewable energy developments and rail corridors to utilities upgrades and civil projects in regional areas with limited services. While each project type has its own challenges, the support requirements are often similar.

    In practice, that looks like:

    • Renewables: staged mobilisation, site compounds and power solutions, and planning for long-lead items
    • Rail and linear infrastructure: traffic management support, access planning and dependable equipment supply as crews move along the corridor
    • Regional civil works: equipment that can handle changing ground conditions, plus planned servicing and swap options
    • Emergency and recovery work: responsive supply when conditions are uncertain and timelines are compressed

    5. How Kennards Hire helps throughout the project

    Remote support doesn’t end once equipment is delivered. The work is often won or lost in the middle of the job, when weather changes, scopes shift or something breaks.

    Throughout a remote project, we support by:

    • Keeping delivery and swap plans current as the programme changes
    • Coordinating servicing to reduce downtime
    • Helping teams choose workable alternatives when the original plan doesn’t suit site conditions
    • Supporting compliance and site safety requirements, including traffic equipment and site rules
    • Providing accessible support points through our branch network or on-site pop-up branches, so crews can keep moving

    Remote projects reward preparation, but they also demand adaptability. We keep supply and support predictable as your equipment partner, even when the site isn’t.