Tulsa · Oklahoma
Tulsa runs on one of the densest concentrations of energy and pipeline corporate HQs in the country: Williams Companies (energy infrastructure pipeline, Downtown HQ), Helmerich & Payne (drilling), ONEOK (gas/NGL pipeline, Downtown HQ), ONE Gas, Magellan Midstream, plus BOK Financial Corporation (the largest bank headquartered in Oklahoma, Downtown HQ). Layer in Saint Francis Health System (the largest healthcare employer in the metro), the University of Tulsa, plus Cherokee Nation Businesses operating throughout the region. Tornado risk is a standing operational consideration during spring season. JRP runs route coverage across the seven-county metro.
Why Tulsa is operationally distinctive
Tulsa hosts a remarkable concentration of energy and pipeline corporate HQs for a metro of its size: Williams Companies (energy infrastructure pipeline, Downtown HQ), Helmerich & Payne (one of the largest land drilling contractors in the world), ONEOK (Fortune 500 gas and NGL pipeline operator, Downtown HQ), ONE Gas (natural gas distribution), Magellan Midstream (refined products pipeline), plus BOK Financial Corporation (the largest bank headquartered in Oklahoma). The combined corporate density punches well above the metro's roughly one million population and anchors substantial corporate office work along the Downtown Tulsa core.
Beyond the energy cluster, the metro hosts substantial healthcare presence: Saint Francis Health System (the largest healthcare employer in the metro), Hillcrest HealthCare System, Ascension St. John. Plus the long-standing American Airlines Maintenance Base (one of the largest commercial aircraft maintenance facilities in the country, located adjacent to Tulsa International Airport). The combined corporate, healthcare, and aerospace base supports recurring commercial work across office TI, hospital decommissioning, FF&E refresh, and R2-certified IT routing.
For multi-state corporate accounts spanning Tulsa plus operations in Oklahoma City, Dallas, Kansas City, or other Southern Plains metros, we coordinate disposal routing across all jurisdictions under one master account.
The Tulsa Arts District corridor
The Tulsa Arts District (formerly the Brady Arts District) plus the broader Downtown core has experienced substantial revitalization over the past decade, anchored by the BOK Center, ONEOK Field, and Guthrie Green. The new Greenwood Rising / Black Wall Street development extends the corridor north of Downtown. Strong restaurant, music, and event activity drives substantial hospitality, small-commercial, and event-related cleanout work.
For commercial customers, the Tulsa Arts District functions as a distinct submarket from the corporate Downtown core. The hospitality and event traffic patterns favor weekend and after-hours work windows. We pre-stage Loader capacity to support both Downtown and the Arts District during peak hours.
Strong realtor referral relationships in the established Maple Ridge, Swan Lake, and Brookside neighborhoods for high-end residential pre-listing and estate cleanout work.
Submarkets we cover
The Tulsa metro spans seven counties anchored by Tulsa, Wagoner, and Rogers. Each submarket has a distinct commercial profile and disposal-routing pattern.
Trophy office and the Fortune 1000 corporate HQ concentration: BOK Financial, Williams Companies, ONEOK. Plus the BOK Center, ONEOK Field, and the Tulsa Arts District / Greenwood Rising. Common scopes: high-rise office TI, hotel furniture refresh, post-event venue cleanouts.
Tulsa Arts District (formerly Brady) plus the new Greenwood Rising / Black Wall Street redevelopment. Restaurants, music venues, BOK Center, ONEOK Field, Guthrie Green. Common scopes: hospitality FF&E refresh, post-event cleanouts, small-commercial.
Established Tulsa neighborhoods with active residential infill, restaurants, and growing small-commercial. Strong realtor referral relationships in the surrounding Maple Ridge and Swan Lake corridors. Common scopes: pre-listing cleanouts, estate work, small-business commercial.
Major suburban corporate corridor along Memorial Drive and Yale Avenue. Substantial corporate office plus retail (Woodland Hills Mall area). Different jurisdiction (Tulsa County extending south). Common scopes: corporate office TI, retail refresh, recurring commercial.
The largest suburb in the metro and one of the fastest-growing cities in Oklahoma. Substantial residential growth, commercial office, and retail. Different jurisdiction (Tulsa County extending east plus Wagoner County). Common scopes: pre-listing cleanouts, multifamily turnover, recurring small-commercial.
Northern Tulsa metro along Highway 169 with substantial residential growth and growing commercial. Different jurisdiction (Tulsa County extending north plus Rogers County). Common scopes: pre-listing cleanouts, recurring multifamily, small-business commercial.
Southern Tulsa County corridor along the Arkansas River, anchored by the Jenks Riverwalk. Substantial residential growth and growing commercial. Common scopes: pre-listing cleanouts, recurring multifamily, small-commercial.
Cherokee Nation HQ and Northeastern State University. Different jurisdiction (Cherokee County). Cherokee Nation Businesses operate substantial commercial and hospitality presence throughout the corridor. Common scopes: institutional procurement, hospitality FF&E, small-business commercial.
How disposal works in the Tulsa region
Oklahoma solid waste is regulated by the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) under Title 252 Chapter 515. The Tulsa metro's regional disposal capacity is anchored by Republic Services and Waste Management regional facilities, including the Quarry Landfill in Mannford and the Tulsa Recycle and Transfer facilities. Disposal pricing is competitive vs East and West Coast metros due to ample regional capacity.
Major regional landfill serving the Tulsa metro from the western edge. Used as a primary disposal endpoint for commercial work consolidated through Tulsa County. Heavy commercial traffic during business hours.
Regional landfill serving the Tulsa metro. Used for commercial and residential work consolidated through Tulsa County. Includes recycling and C&D processing on-site.
Multiple transfer stations operated by the major haulers serve the metro. Used for consolidation before regional landfill routing. Includes recycling and C&D processing on-site at most facilities.
Cherokee Nation environmental regulations apply for projects within the Cherokee Nation Reservation jurisdiction. Cherokee Nation Businesses coordinate with the Tribal environmental office for substantial commercial projects.
Construction and demolition debris routes through regional certified C&D processors. DEQ diversion documentation applies to commercial construction projects. We coordinate diversion summaries with weight-by-stream breakdowns delivered alongside disposal manifests.
Mattress and appliance routing depends on condition. Donation-eligible items route through regional partners (Goodwill of Eastern Oklahoma, Catholic Charities, Habitat ReStore network) where condition permits. Hazmat partner coordination available for materials outside our standard scope.
Disposal routing depends on county jurisdiction (Tulsa, Wagoner, Rogers, Creek, Osage, Okmulgee, Pawnee) plus the Cherokee Nation jurisdiction east of Tulsa County. Severe weather coordination is factored into operational planning during spring tornado season.
Most common Tulsa scopes
Multifamily portfolios across Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Owasso, Bixby, plus the broader Wagoner and Rogers County corridor. Recurring monthly bulk-waste plus on-call tenant move-out cleanouts.
Saint Francis Health System (the largest healthcare employer in the metro), Hillcrest HealthCare, Ascension St. John. HIPAA-aligned IT destruction standard.
Energy and pipeline corporate density: BOK Financial, Williams Companies, Helmerich & Payne, ONEOK, ONE Gas, Magellan Midstream. TI debris, decommissioning, FF&E refresh, plus the broader Downtown core.
American Airlines Maintenance Base, AAON HVAC operations, plus the broader Tulsa industrial corridor. Aerospace MRO and HVAC manufacturing presence drive recurring industrial cleanout work.
Active GC coverage across the metro. DEQ documentation requirements coordinated per project. Substantial residential growth in the Broken Arrow, Owasso, Jenks, and Bixby corridors driving new construction activity.
Pre-listing cleanouts and estate cleanouts. Strong realtor referral relationships in the established Maple Ridge, Swan Lake, Brookside, and South Tulsa neighborhoods.
Single pickup, recurring contract, multi-property portfolio, or one-time project. Whatever the scope, we'll route to the right rep and respond within one business day. Coverage spans Tulsa, Wagoner, Rogers, and the broader seven-county Tulsa metro under one master account.
Tulsa accounts