Some New Jersey rock slopes produce rockfall events that overwhelm standard wire mesh. Large blocks, high fall heights, and steep trajectories combine to generate impact energies that require engineered high-capacity containment. Along I-80 through the Delaware Water Gap, I-78 through the Watchung Mountains, Route 23 along the Palisades, and Route 15 through the Highlands, these high-energy zones demand mesh systems rated for the actual forces involved.
Access Limited installs high-capacity steel mesh systems across New Jersey's most challenging rockfall corridors — every system is engineered for the specific energy rating, block size distribution, and slope geometry of the site.
High-tensile mesh uses wire with break loads exceeding standard galvanized mesh — providing greater puncture resistance, higher energy absorption, and longer service life under repeated rockfall loading.
Cable net systems use interlocking steel cable rings or woven cable panels to create an extremely strong containment surface. These systems are specified for the highest-energy rockfall applications where wire mesh reaches its capacity limits.
Spike plate systems use steel plates bolted to the rock face to create rigid anchor points for high-capacity mesh. The plates distribute the bolt load across a wider area of rock surface — critical in fractured rock masses where point loads could cause local failure.
Access Limited brings specialty rockfall equipment to New Jersey's constrained, high-traffic corridors.
See why NJDOT, NJ Transit, Palisades Interstate Park Commission, utility providers, and Port Authority trust Access Limited for high-capacity steel mesh and rockfall mitigation across New Jersey.
Access Limited delivers specialized high-capacity steel mesh across New Jersey's rockfall corridors. Complete the form to request an assessment or call our team directly.