fbpx

Dumpster Rental Services in Salem, MA

Altri Services currently offers 17 yd Dumpster Rentals in Salem, MA in 1 Ton and 2 Ton weight allowances.



Altri Services also offers 20 yd Dumpster Rentals in Salem, MA with a 3 Ton weight allowance.

Find us on…

Sarah Wasserman
Sarah Wasserman
October 28, 2023
Great communication and service! Pricing for dumpster was better than other local waste removal services.
R Ferrari
R Ferrari
July 7, 2023
I emailed "2 Guys and a Truck" (Altri Services) just last night...Mike got right back to me and said he'd reach out in the morning. I received a text first thing this morning and we agree on a time. Mike and his 2 man crew where right on time . We agreed on a very reasonable price to haul my considerable junk pile away. His 2 man crew were personable and professional and completed the job in a timely manner. Thanks for the excellent work. I would highly recommend "2 guys and a truck". Bob from West Lynn
Monize Baldi
Monize Baldi
June 28, 2023
I was in need of a dumpster at the last minute and Mike responded promptly and delivered it to me the next day at the scheduled time. I will always recommend it, the best service and care
Guy Parsons
Guy Parsons
June 9, 2023
2 guys and a truck came to clear out a garage with years of accumulated junk. They handled what would have been weeks of leaving items out on the street and took care of it in about 40 minutes. They were in and out, respectful, considerate and efficient.
Lawrence Fariole
Lawrence Fariole
May 25, 2023
If you're looking for a junk removal or apartment cleanout service don't hesitate to call Altri. I use them on Tuesday May 23rd to clean out my mom's apartment In East Boston who recently just passed away. They were super professional answered every call back and we're very reasonable in price. Not to mention they only took 2 hours to finish an apartment that had a lot of stuff. I hope this helps anyone who was in the same need as I was. I will again call Altri in the future if need be.Thank you for the excellent service . LARRY
Bethann Swartz
Bethann Swartz
May 15, 2023
We were blown away by the Altri. Price was more than fair, he was prompt and had great communication. He always answered the phone and responded to texts very quickly. The whole house clean out was a stressful process and this was the one area that was stress free. I highly recommend Altri for dumpster/hauling needs.
Harolyn Fucile
Harolyn Fucile
May 15, 2023
Altri was a perfect business to work with as we needed a dumpster rental. They had the best price by far and were more than accommodating. Communication was easy and efficient through text messaging and responses were quite quick. I would highly recommend them to anyone in need of a dumpster.
Angela Lewis
Angela Lewis
May 13, 2023
Showed up on time and was so fast I couldn't believe it! They saved me from a disaster! HIGHLY recommend
N Munroe
N Munroe
April 12, 2023
Straight forward, honest service with a fair price. Showed up on time, finished on time. Couldn't ask for anything more. Will hire again and recommend to friends.
Laura Luna
Laura Luna
April 7, 2023
They showed up a half hour early, we’re polite, responsive and FAST!!!! They’re local, so I love that! I would call them again in a heartbeat. Thanks so much.

QUESTIONS?

Contact info

FAQ’s

How does the process work?

Please click the following link to see how it works:
https://altriservices.com/dumpster-rental-process/

What items are prohibited?

Unacceptable Items: – $125.00 Fine Minimum: Air Conditioners, Refrigerators, Mattresses, Box Springs, Car or Truck Tires, Propane or any Gas or Liquid Filled Tanks or Gasoline, Asbestos, Hazardous Waste.

Do I need a permit?

It depends. You should check with your town or city.

Should I put down wood?

We would suggest it. We are not responsible for any driveway damage.

Want to work with us?


Areas We Service

Beverly, MA / Chelsea, MA / Danvers, MA / East Boston, MA / Everett, MA / Lynn, MA / Lynnfield, MA / Malden, MA / Marblehead, MA / Medford, MA / Melrose, MA / Middleton, MA / Nahant, MA / North Reading, MA / Peabody, MA / Reading, MA / Revere, MA / Salem, MA / Saugus, MA / Stoneham, MA / Swampscott, MA / Wakefield, MA / Winthrop, MA / Woburn, MA

Dumpster Rentals links and other Salem information

External links:
How much does it typically cost to rent a dumpster?
Roll Off Dumpster Rental Prices
Which dumpster size should I rent?
The Salvation Army
Goodwill
Habitat for Humanity
Wheelabrator
Republic Peabody
Two Guys and a Truck Junk
Salem Restaurants

About Altri Services Dumpster Rentals in Salem MA

There are many reasons for needing Dumpster Rentals in Salem. It may be that you are moving out of your residence or perhaps you are getting a new couch, a new dining room set or a new bedroom set. Perhaps you have just completed a remodeling project and need to get rid of the waste. Whatever reason that you do need Dumpster Rental in Salem, Altri Services is your number one resource for all your Dumpster Rental in Salem needs.

You are in good hands with Altri Services because we are professional and fully insured. We provide Dumpster Rental in Salem to all of the neighborhoods listed below. We are locally owned and operated and we keep our overhead low. As a result, we are able to pass the saving along to our customers. Our trucks and equipment are new, so you never have to worry about our dependability. Altri Services values your time and prides itself on being punctual, so you never have to worry your Dumpster Rental in Salem project being delayed.  In short, when you partner with Altri Services, you can be assured the the job will be done right and on-time and at the best possible price.

Whether you need a large 20-yard container for an extensive construction project or a small 10 yard bin for light spring cleaning, we have the right size and type of dumpster to fit your needs. We also offer experienced personnel who can help you determine the best size and type of dumpster for your particular job, as well as provide helpful tips on proper use and disposal practices. Plus, our team is available 24/7 in case of any emergency situations that may arise during the duration of your project. When it comes to clean up after a home sale or renovation project, time is often of the essence – so why wait? Get in touch with us today and let us help get things rolling! Our friendly professionals can walk you through all the options available from start to finish so you’re sure to find exactly what suits your needs. Don’t hesitate – reach out now and see how easy it can be to rent a reliable dumpster with Altri Dumpster Rentals!

Neighborhoods in
zip code 01970 where Altri Services provides Dumpster Rentals in Salem MA

GALLOWS HILL
Roughly the large hill extending from Highland Ave to Peabody City line in one direction; and from Boston St area to the top of Gallows Hill in the other direction. Originally developed in the mid-19th century, with mostly gablefront homes built to house workers at nearby leather factories. Notable sights include Proctor’s Ledge, the site of the witchcraft hysteria hangings in 1692, and the origin site of the Great Salem Fire of 1914. Commercial center is the length of Boston Street. For longer than a century was Salem’s Ethnic Irish Community.
Blubber Hollow  A district of Gallows Hill, at the seams of the McIntire, Mack Park, and Gallows Hill areas along Bridge and Boston Streets. Originally named for the whale oil rendered here. In the 19th century the area became home to many tanneries and complementary industries like shoe manufacturing. The Great Salem Fire of 1914started in a leather factory at the corner of Boston and Bridge Streets.
Witchcraft Heights late 20th century extension of Gallows Hill neighborhood, from the top of Gallows Hill marked by the water tower back to approximately Marlborough Road. A subdivision, not a distinct district, so in this listing is placed within the Gallows Hill neighborhood. Exclusively single-family residential, cookie-cutter split levels and raised ranches mostly.

BRIDGE STREET NECK
The more westerly of Salem’s two necks, extending along Bridge Street from downtown up to the Beverly Bridge at the tip of the neck.

000_0361

For some reason only the Bridge St Neck neighborhood, out of all Salem neighborhoods, gets a fancy entry sign. This one is in front of the old Salem Jail; a matching sign  brackets the other end of the Neck at the Beverly Bridge

Bridge Street Neck was the landing site in 1626 of the original English colonists led by Roger Conant. Settlers from an larger expedition from England in 1628, led by John Endecott, pushed the settlement further up the North River estuary to about where the train station is today. A bridge to central Beverly has been at the tip of the neck since 1788.

SALEM NECK
The more easterly of Salem’s two edge peninsulas, extending from the Webb St (what used to be called Neck Gate) axis to the tip of the peninsula. Notable sights are Winter Island and Salem Willows. The commercial center is the Salem Willows. First developed as a summer resort area in the late 19th century connected to central Salem by trolley; by mid-20th century converted fully to year-round homes.

Former Ethnic Neighborhoods of Salem. Irish on Gallows Hill; French-Canadian in The Point; Polish in the Waterfront District; Italian on Mill Hill.

DOWNTOWN
From the Jackson St / Boston St axis on the westerly side east to the Collins Cove / Webb St axis on the easterly side, and from the North River to Salem Harbor and Harbor Channel in the other direction. Contains the Central Business District, the commercial core of Salem, as well as several outlying predominantly residential districts.

Central Business District From the North Street / Summer Street axis east to the Salem Common, and from the North River south to Salem Harbor. The Salem courthouses, City of Salem municipal offices, the commuter rail station, and most tourist attractions are here. Among the plentiful notable sights will mention here only the Essex Street Pedestrian Mall and the Peabody-Essex Museum. Commercial core is the streets around Town House Square a.k.a. Lappin Park.
McIntire Historic District  Extends from the North Street / Summer Street axis on the east side west to the Boston St / Jackson Street axis, and from North River on the north south to Broad Street. Includes the Chestnut Street District listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Named after the architect and Salem resident Samuel McIntire, a progenitor of Federal style architecture. The neighborhood was originally built off the wealth made in the Old China Trade by Salem’s merchants. Notable grand historic homes include the Peirce-Nichols House and The Witch House.
Salem Common The district just east of the Central Business District comprised of the Washington Square streets around the Salem Common and all the streets leading into Washington Square. Noted for the grand Federal mansions facing the Common, Salem’s grandest and oldest park. Site of the first muster. Attractions include the original Salem Witch Museum in the former Second Church and the Hawthorne Hotel.
Derby Street / Waterfront District The former wharf area, extending along Derby Street and the waterfront from downtown up to the base of Salem Neck. Notable sights include The House of Seven Gables and the Salem Maritime National Historic Site. From the late 19th century until the late 20th century was the location of a flourishing Ethnic Polish community, replete with shops and markets and once even a branch library catering to Polish-speaking residents.
Mill Hill A downtown district extending from the former Mill Pond (now Riley Plaza) up to the Jackson St axis, and in the other direction from the Norman / Broad St axis to the old railroad yards behind Jefferson Ave. Once a Little Italy district populated by Italian immigrants in a tight knot around St. Mary’s Italian Church, replete with shops and markets catering to Italian-speaking residents. Before Italian immigrants moved in the area was known variously as Knockers Hole (from the shipbuilding sheds along Mill Pond who “knocked” wooden planks together) or Roast Meat Hill (origin unknown, possibly derogatory), and was the center of a small mid-19th century African-American community. Today also known as the Greater Endicott Street area.

salem-neighborhoods-1891.jpg

Salem Neighborhoods overlaid on 1891 map of Salem. Everything to the left of the dotted line was developed only in the last century of Salem’s nearly four centuries of existence.

THE POINT
In colonial times this neighborhood, originally called Stage Point, was a peninsula jutting into Salem Harbor just across the Harbor Channel, separated from downtown by Mill Pond and the South River Channel. Filling in of all of the pond and most of the channel has left The Point more a promontory today than a peninsula. In the 1840’s the placement of  Naumkeag Steam Cotton Mills (later the Pequot Mills) at the tip of The Point, for a long time the largest cotton cloth mill in America, created a great need for immigrant labor. This need was satisfied by a shunt of impoverished workers from Quebec, who filled the tenements that arose on the streets near the Mill, creating a vibrant Quebecois ethnic neighborhood focused around St. Joseph French Catholic Church, so French that its name was once rendered as le quartier la Pointe.

The Point neighborhood and the mills were quickly rebuilt after the Great Salem Fire in 1914 obliterated both, but the Mills could not survive the cotton industry moving south, and in 1953 Pequot Mills closed for good. Any remaining French-Canadians who had not already translocated to Castle Hill moved out. The Mills property was converted to the Shetland Park industrial park in 1958, and in the 1960’s abandoned (and cheap) properties began to be filled by Hispanic immigrants, mostly Dominican but also from all over the Caribbean. Thriving bodegas and carnicerias replaced former pastisseries and charcuteries, and the neighborhood renaissanced as el barrio el Punto.

the-point-boundaries.jpg

Officially designated boundaries of The Point. The only such official map of any Salem neighborhood that can be readily located.

Today The Point is the only ethnic neighborhood still extant in Salem.  True to its Hispanic heritage, tenement walls throughout the neighborhood are resplendent with colorful murals. As a mark of its reach, The Point is the only Salem neighborhood with a separate wikipedia page and an officially designated map of its boundaries. Commercial centers are Congress St and the portion of Lafayette Avenue that passes through The Point before entering the South Salem neighborhood. art-murals-2-the-point.jpg

art-murals-the-point.jpg

Several of the spectacular murals that inhabit The Point.

SOUTH SALEM
The area from the southern edge of The Point (roughly Palmer Cove axis) south along Lafayette Ave. down to the Salem State University area, and from Salem Harbor to commuter rail tracks in the other axis. Mostly farms and estates until Salem State (then Salem Normal School) moved its campus to a “rural” location in 1896, after which the spaces between downtown and the campus quickly filled with homes and apartment buildings in late Victorian styles. Commercial center is the length of Lafayette Avenue.

Destruction Map Great Salem Fire

The Great Fire originated at 55 Boston St in Gallows Hill, took out the far edge of the McIntire District, nearly all of Mill Hill, annihilated The Point, skirted the Central Business District, and was spreading into the Waterfront District on one side and South Salem on the other side before it was finally repulsed.

NORTH SALEM
The area across the North River from central Salem up to the Peabody city line south to north, from Gallows Hill / Blubber Hollow to the Danvers River in the other axis. Up until the late 19th century was mostly fields and orchards, apart from a line of factories along the North River. In the early 20th century estates and pastures got subdivided into home lots. In 1775 the North River Bridge was the scene of Leslie’s Retreat the first armed albeit non-shooting military engagement of the American Revolution. Commercial center is the length of North Street.
Mack Park District The portion of North Salem west of North Street around Mack Park, formerly Ledge Hill Park.
Northfields District The portion of North Salem east of North Street around Greenlawn Cemetery.

CASTLE HILL
The hills and ledges around where Jefferson Ave crosses the MBTA railroad tracks, roughly from Mill Hill in central Salem down to Salem State University in South Salem. Commercial center is the length of Jefferson Avenue. Highland Park, a.k.a. Salem Woods, the largest and most wild of Salem’s parks, is the most notable attraction of Castle Hill.  The area was mostly farms and quarries until the early 20th century, when French Canadian immigrants began to settle around St. Anne’s French Catholic Church atop Castle Hill, leaving their original settlement in The Point, a migration accelerated when The Point was wiped out by the Great Salem Fire of 1914.

Castle Hill vintage photo

Vintage photo of central Salem purportedly taken from atop Castle Hill

VINNIN SQUARE
Salem’s southernmost neighborhood is around Vinnin Square (the conjunction of Loring Ave, Paradise Road, Vinnin St and Salem St) up to rear of the Salem State campus. The neighborhood includes portions of the neighboring towns of Marblehead and Swampscott. Commercial entities primarily on the Swampscott side, the Salem side primarily residential. Developed from the mid to late 20th century, predominantly single family homes in mid-20th century styles.

West Salem
Not a neighborhood or even a district, but a Community, consisting of all the leftover parts of southwestern Salem along both sides of Highland Ave towards the border with Lynn. Undeveloped until the last third of the 20th century, when little by little filled in with strip shopping malls, big box stores, and isolated subdivisions unconnected to each other. Often Witchcraft Heights is included in West Salem, but in this compilation it’s appended instead to the Gallows Hill neighborhood.

000_0363

Marker for West Salem located on Highland Avenue in front of North Shore Medical Center

Loading…


Roll off container services, construction waste, waste hauler, junk removal, construction debris, low cost dumpster rental, home improvement, demolition waste, selling house, house clean out, basement clean out, waste disposal, renovation waste, remodeling waste, contractor dumpster, East Boston, roofing shingles disposal, north shore, rubbish, trash, refuse, flooring disposal, ceramic tile disposal, furniture disposal, carpet disposal, pressure treated wood disposal, old windows disposal, plaster disposal, kitchen cabinet disposal, bathroom remodel waste, plywood remnants, Sheetrock, drywall, vinyl siding disposal, garage cleanout, old fence, old decking, old shed,

Call Now ButtonCall Now
%d