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The keys to a new tower unit near Grand Ave feel great in hand. Then a resident glances at the moving quote and pauses. Why does a move into a Downtown Los Angeles high-rise cost more than the same apartment across town? The answer sits in the elevators, the loading docks, and the tight streets that wrap around South Park.
Our team has moved hundreds of residents into buildings across DTLA, from the glass towers along Figueroa to the converted lofts in the Historic Core. We have learned exactly what pushes a bill up and what keeps it reasonable. Pricing changes a lot depending on whether someone is moving a studio, a one-bedroom, or a two-bedroom unit.
A high-rise move in Downtown LA is not the same job as carrying boxes into a ground-floor duplex. The building itself adds steps, rules, and wait time that a suburban move never sees. Crews spend real hours dealing with elevators and docks before a single sofa reaches the truck.
Most of the moving cost factors here come down to access and time. A crew that would finish a normal apartment in three hours might spend five inside a tower with a shared freight elevator. The table below shows how a standard move compares with a Downtown LA high-rise move.
| Factor | Standard Apartment Move | DTLA High-Rise Move |
|---|---|---|
| Elevator use | None or short walk-up | Reserved freight elevator, timed windows |
| Parking | Driveway or nearby curb | Loading dock or metered street spot |
| Insurance | Rarely required | Certificate of insurance often required |
| Carry distance | Short, direct | Long hallways plus elevator ride |
| Average added time | Baseline | 1 to 3 extra hours |
Buildings in South Park and the Historic Core almost always require a booked service elevator. Management hands out a set window, sometimes just two or three hours, and the crew has to work inside it. If the move runs long, the crew may lose elevator access and wait for the next open slot.
Loading dock access follows the same pattern. Many towers have one dock shared by movers, delivery trucks, and trash pickup. A crew that shows up without a dock reservation can sit idle while another company finishes their window.
These building rules directly affect crew hours. When our team books the freight elevator ahead of time, we protect the schedule and keep labor costs down. A move that ignores the reservation system almost always runs longer and costs more.
We always confirm the elevator and dock details with building management before move day. That single step removes a common source of delay in Downtown towers.
Parking along Figueroa Street, Flower, and Olive is tight on any given day. Metered spots fill fast, and a 26-foot truck cannot squeeze into a compact car space. Crews often need a real loading zone or a temporary permit to park legally near the entrance.
When no dock exists, the truck may end up half a block away. That extra distance turns every trip into a longer walk, which adds labor time to the bill. A crew hauling a dresser 200 feet is slower than one parked at the door.
Some buildings sit on streets where a parking permit from the city helps hold curb space. The Los Angeles Department of Transportation handles temporary no-parking permits that keep a spot open for the truck. Planning this in advance saves real money.
Our crews know which Downtown blocks have usable loading zones and which do not. That local knowledge shapes where the truck parks and how the day flows.
Almost every DTLA tower wants a certificate of insurance, or COI, before move day. This document proves the moving company carries liability coverage that protects the building. Without it, security may turn a crew away at the dock.
Building management usually spells out exact coverage amounts and names the property as an additional insured. Some towers near Bunker Hill want the COI submitted days in advance for approval. A last-minute mover who cannot produce one loses the job.
This requirement shapes the crew a resident can hire. A licensed, insured company handles the COI process as routine paperwork. Popeye Moving & Storage Co. issues these certificates for Downtown buildings all the time, so the resident never has to chase it.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration also reminds movers to verify a company's license and insurance before booking. A proper COI is one clear sign of a legitimate crew.
The walk from the dock to a unit inside a tower adds up quickly. A crew might roll a loaded dolly through a parking garage, down a hallway, into the freight elevator, and down another hall on the resident's floor. That path can stretch several hundred feet each way.
Every one of those trips costs labor time. A ground-floor move has almost no carry distance, so the same volume of goods moves faster. In a high-rise, the hallway distance alone can add an hour to the job.
Older converted buildings in the Historic Core sometimes have narrow halls or tight corners that slow the crew further. Large furniture may need to be turned, wrapped, or partly taken apart to fit. All of that shows up in the final hours.
When we quote a Downtown move, we factor in the real carry path, not just the unit size. That is why an honest estimate for a tower runs higher than a generic online calculator.
A studio is the smallest common unit in a Downtown tower, so it sits at the low end of the price scale. Still, the high-rise factors above keep a studio move from being dirt cheap. Elevator time and carry distance apply no matter how few boxes a resident owns.
Most studio moves fall into a predictable range once the building is factored in. The table below shows what residents usually see for a DTLA studio move within Downtown or from a nearby neighborhood.
| Detail | Studio in a DTLA High-Rise |
|---|---|
| Crew size | 2 movers |
| Time on site | 2 to 4 hours |
| Typical price range | $400 to $800 |
| Common add-ons | Packing, elevator wait, bulky items |
Most studios need a two-person crew working 2 to 4 hours. That covers loading, the drive, elevator trips, and placing everything in the new unit. A tidy, well-packed studio can wrap on the shorter end.
Elevator waits are the main thing that pushes those hours higher. If the building has one shared freight elevator and another move is booked the same day, the crew may lose 20 or 30 minutes each round. Those minutes add to the hourly rate total.
Our two-person crews handle Downtown studios often, so they move fast once inside. They know how to stage boxes near the elevator to cut trip counts. A smooth studio move rarely needs more than the base window.
For anyone moving a small unit fast, our local residential moving team builds the crew and hours around the actual building.
A studio move within Downtown or from the Arts District or Little Tokyo usually runs $400 to $800. The low end applies to a light load with easy dock access. The high end shows up when packing help or long elevator waits enter the picture.
Some companies offer a flat rate for a studio, while others charge an hourly cost with a two-hour minimum. Both models can work, but the hourly rate gives a clearer picture in a high-rise where wait time varies. A flat rate should always spell out what happens if the job runs long.
Distance matters too. A move from Little Tokyo into a South Park tower is short and cheap. A studio coming from a neighborhood outside Downtown adds drive time to the bill.
We give a firm studio price range up front so residents can budget without guesswork. The estimate reflects the real building, not a rough average.
Heavy items are the number one surprise in a studio move. A Murphy bed bolted to the wall, a solid-wood platform bed, or an oversized sleeper sofa takes extra hands and time. These pieces can turn a two-hour job into a four-hour one.
Buildings with only one shared freight elevator add real cost. When the crew has to wait for the car between loads, the elevator wait shows up as billed hours. There is no way around a slow elevator except to plan trips carefully.
Add-on charges also come from packing. A resident who has not packed by move day forces the crew to box everything, which adds materials and labor. Even a small studio holds a lot once it is all in boxes.
We flag these cost drivers during the estimate so no one is shocked. A quick walkthrough or video call helps us spot the Murphy bed or the tricky elevator before the truck arrives.
Popeye Moving & Storage serves Los Angeles and all of Los Angeles County.
Moving up from a studio to a one-bedroom brings a real jump in DTLA pricing. There is simply more furniture, more boxes, and often a separate bedroom set to handle. The 1BR move cost reflects both the added volume and the same high-rise access hurdles.
A one-bedroom move in a tower near Grand Ave usually needs a slightly larger crew and more hours. The table shows the typical numbers our team sees for a one-bedroom move Downtown.
| Detail | 1BR in a DTLA High-Rise |
|---|---|
| Crew size | 2 to 3 movers |
| Time on site | 3 to 5 hours |
| Typical price range | $700 to $1,400 |
| Common add-ons | Packing, high-floor time, dining set |
A one-bedroom usually calls for a two- to three-person crew and a 3 to 5 hour window. The third mover speeds things up when there is a full bedroom plus a living room to load. In towers near Grand Ave, that extra hand often pays for itself in saved hours.
The move hours depend heavily on the elevator situation and the floor. A three-person crew can keep one mover staging at the elevator while two others load the truck. That rhythm cuts down on idle time.
When the building has a fast, dedicated elevator, a 1BR can finish near the three-hour mark. A shared elevator on a busy Saturday can push it toward five. We size the crew to match the building, not just the unit.
Our team plans the crew around the real access path so the one-bedroom move stays on schedule.
A one-bedroom move within DTLA usually lands between $700 and $1,400. The spread comes from crew size, hours, and how much packing is involved. A resident who packs their own boxes stays near the low end.
Distance to neighborhoods like Bunker Hill affects the moving estimate too. A short hop from the Financial District into a Bunker Hill tower adds little drive time. A one-bedroom coming from farther out raises the total.
Building factors weigh in as well. Two identical one-bedrooms can price differently if one sits on the 5th floor and the other on the 25th. The 1BR price range always reflects the specific tower.
We build every one-bedroom quote around the actual address so the number holds up on move day.
A typical one-bedroom holds a queen bed, a dresser, nightstands, and a dining set. Add a sofa, a coffee table, and a TV stand, and the furniture count climbs fast. Each large piece needs wrapping and careful handling in tight tower hallways.
Box count matters just as much. A one-bedroom often produces 20 to 40 boxes once the kitchen and closets are packed. More boxes mean more trips through the elevator and more billed time.
Packing services shift the total in both directions. Full packing costs more up front but saves the resident days of work and protects fragile items. Our full service packing crews handle the kitchen and closets so nothing gets rushed on move day.
We can also drop off boxes and supplies ahead of time for anyone who wants to pack themselves. That keeps the furniture count and box count clear before the truck shows up.
Floor height changes the math more than people expect. A one-bedroom on the 30th floor means a longer elevator ride on every single trip. Those extra seconds multiply across dozens of loads.
A high floor also raises the odds of elevator sharing during peak hours. When residents, deliveries, and movers all want the same car, the crew waits. That elevator time turns into billed labor.
Low-floor units move faster because the elevator ride is short and the crew keeps a steady pace. The same one-bedroom can cost noticeably less on the 4th floor than on the 30th. We factor the exact floor into every high-rise estimate.
Knowing the floor ahead of time lets us book the right elevator window and set honest hours.
A two-bedroom is the largest common unit in most Downtown towers. More rooms mean more furniture, more boxes, and a bigger crew to handle it all in the elevator window. The 2BR move cost reflects a full day of high-rise work.
High-rise pricing for a two-bedroom move covers a larger truck and often more elevator trips. The table below shows the typical range our team sees for a two-bedroom move in DTLA.
| Detail | 2BR in a DTLA High-Rise |
|---|---|
| Crew size | 3 to 4 movers |
| Time on site | 5 to 8 hours |
| Typical price range | $1,300 to $2,800 |
| Common add-ons | Piano, safe, second truck trip |
A full two-bedroom usually needs a three- to four-person crew and a 5 to 8 hour window. The four-person crew keeps the move duration in check when there are two full bedrooms plus a living and dining room. Fewer movers on a big unit only stretches the day and the bill.
The larger crew also handles heavy pieces safely. A king bed, a loaded bookcase, or a sectional needs two or more people to move it through a tower hallway. Trying to do that with a small crew risks damage and injury.
Elevator windows push crews to work quickly and in sync. A four-person team can load the truck while others stage boxes at the elevator. That coordination is what keeps a two-bedroom move inside its booked window.
We match crew size to the two-bedroom load so the job finishes without losing elevator access.
A two-bedroom move within Downtown usually runs $1,300 to $2,800. Crew size, hours, and packing drive the spread. A fully packed unit with no elevator delays lands closer to the middle.
Distance shapes the moving quote as well. A short move from the Fashion District or Financial District into a nearby tower keeps drive time low. A two-bedroom coming from outside Downtown adds to the total.
Specialty items can raise the 2BR price range further. A piano, a large safe, or a marble tabletop each adds handling time and sometimes a separate fee. We list these clearly in the quote so there are no surprises.
Every two-bedroom estimate we give reflects the real building and the real inventory.
Two-bedroom units often hold the biggest pieces we move. King beds, large sectionals, pianos, and safes all need extra care and sometimes extra hands. These specialty items do not fit standard handling.
A piano is the clearest example. Uprights and grands need special equipment, padding, and trained movers to protect both the instrument and the building. Our piano moving team handles these through tower elevators safely.
Safes and heavy stone furniture bring their own challenges. A gun safe can weigh several hundred pounds and needs the right dolly and enough crew. Extra handling like this may add a fee, but it prevents damage and injury.
For fragile art, glass, or antiques, our specialty moving crews build custom crates. That protection matters even more when a piece travels through a busy freight elevator.
A large two-bedroom sometimes needs two truck trips. If a single truck cannot hold the full load, the crew makes a second run, which adds drive and load time. This is common when a unit has heavy furniture plus a full garage or storage cage.
Multiple elevator trips stack up on a big move. Even with a reserved elevator, a two-bedroom's volume means dozens of loaded rides up and down. Each trip eats into the booked window.
When two trucks are needed, we sometimes book a second elevator window to keep things moving. Planning the elevator trips around the truck loads prevents the crew from sitting idle. That coordination keeps a large move on budget.
Our team maps out the truck and elevator plan before move day so a two-bedroom does not stall halfway through.
Seeing all three unit types together makes the price differences clear. Each step up in unit size adds crew, hours, and dollars. This cost comparison helps a resident spot where their move fits.
The moving price chart below sums up the studio vs 1BR vs 2BR ranges for a DTLA tower. Use it as a starting point, then adjust for packing and building factors.
| Unit Type | Crew Size | Time on Site | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | 2 movers | 2 to 4 hours | $400 to $800 |
| 1BR | 2 to 3 movers | 3 to 5 hours | $700 to $1,400 |
| 2BR | 3 to 4 movers | 5 to 8 hours | $1,300 to $2,800 |
The price summary shows a steady climb from studio to two-bedroom. A studio sits in the $400 to $800 band, a one-bedroom in the $700 to $1,400 band, and a two-bedroom in the $1,300 to $2,800 band. The overlap between brackets reflects packing and building differences.
Where a move lands inside its range depends on the details. A packed, low-floor studio with dock access hits the bottom of its band. An unpacked, high-floor unit with a shared elevator climbs toward the top.
This range comparison gives a realistic starting point for any unit size. It reflects real Downtown jobs, not a national average that ignores towers. Residents can use it to sanity-check any quote they receive.
We refine these ranges into a firm number once we know the building and inventory.
Crew count and total hours grow with each unit size, and that drives the cost. A studio needs two movers, a one-bedroom often adds a third, and a two-bedroom may need four. More movers cost more per hour but finish faster.
Labor hours climb the same way. A studio wraps in a few hours, while a two-bedroom can fill most of a day. Elevator waits stretch every one of these time estimates in a high-rise.
This crew comparison matters for budgeting because hourly rates multiply across the day. A larger crew that finishes sooner can cost less than a small crew that drags on. We size crews to hit the shortest reasonable window.
Understanding the crew and time trade-off helps residents pick the right service level.
The best moving estimate starts with matching the apartment to the right bracket. A resident should count large furniture, estimate box totals, and note the floor and elevator setup. Those details place the move in the correct price band.
Budget planning gets easier once the bracket is clear. A one-bedroom mover should not expect a studio price, and a two-bedroom needs a full-day budget. Honest self-assessment prevents disappointment on move day.
A quote request should include the building name, floor, and a rough inventory. The more detail a resident shares, the tighter the estimate. Vague requests lead to vague numbers.
Our team walks residents through this so the estimate matches the actual move. A quick call or video walkthrough settles it fast.
Popeye Moving & Storage serves Los Angeles and all of Los Angeles County.
Even a solid quote can grow if hidden fees appear on move day. Most surprises trace back to packing, elevators, storage, or timing. Knowing these extra charges ahead of time keeps the final bill in line with the estimate.
Below are the moving add-ons that catch Downtown residents most often. Each one is avoidable with a little planning.
Boxes, tape, and wrap all cost money, and they add up faster than people think. A one-bedroom can need dozens of boxes plus wrapping paper and mattress bags. The box cost alone can run $100 or more for a full unit.
Full-service packing costs more but replaces days of work. A crew packs the whole unit in hours, using proper materials that hold up in a freight elevator. For busy residents, that trade is often worth it.
The choice comes down to time versus money. Self-packing saves cash, while full-service packing saves effort and lowers breakage risk. Both are fine as long as the plan is set before move day.
We offer both options and can deliver packing materials in advance. That way there is no scramble the night before.
Shared elevators in older Historic Core buildings can force real delays. When the single car is busy, the crew waits, and that wait time may appear as a fee on hourly jobs. It is one of the most common surprise charges in Downtown moves.
Sometimes the elevator is out of service entirely on move day. When that happens, the crew may have to use the stairs, which adds a stair carry charge. Hauling furniture up several flights is slow and hard on the crew.
These charges reward advance planning. A reserved elevator window cuts wait time and removes the stair risk. We always confirm elevator status with management before we arrive.
Asking about elevator reliability before booking a unit can save real money later.
Lease dates rarely line up perfectly. When a resident moves out before the new unit is ready, they need short-term storage for the gap. That storage cost is a common add-on people forget to budget.
A move gap of a few days or a few weeks changes the plan. Instead of one trip, the crew loads into storage, then delivers later. Two handling steps cost more than a single direct move.
Local storage keeps this affordable and simple. Our storage solutions hold belongings safely between move-out and move-in near Downtown. That keeps the second trip short.
We plan storage into the quote when lease dates do not match, so the cost is clear from the start.
Timing changes the price more than most residents realize. End-of-month and summer moves in DTLA are the busiest, so rates rise and availability drops. A weekend rate often runs higher than a midweek one.
The last few days of the month are the peak of peak. Most leases turn over then, so every mover in town is booked. Prices climb with demand during that window.
Holidays add the same pressure. A move on a holiday weekend competes with limited crews and higher rates. Planning around these dates keeps costs down.
We help residents find off-peak dates whenever their schedule allows. A small shift in timing can mean real savings.
Plenty of the final bill sits within a resident's control. Smart planning cuts hours and add-ons without cutting service quality. These moving tips reflect what actually saves money on Downtown tower moves.
None of these tricks involve hiring an unlicensed crew or skipping insurance. They are honest ways to reduce moving cost while keeping the move safe.
Reserving the freight elevator ahead of time is the single biggest money saver. A booked window means the crew never waits for the car, which cuts billed hours. Buildings around South Park release these slots on a first-come basis.
Dock reservation works the same way. A held dock spot lets the truck park right at the entrance and keeps the carry distance short. Both bookings protect the schedule.
Advance planning also secures the time slot the resident actually wants. Popular morning windows go fast near the end of the month. Booking early avoids a scramble.
Our team helps coordinate the elevator and dock booking with management. That step alone often shaves an hour off the job.
Fewer items mean fewer boxes, fewer trips, and lower hours. Selling or donating things before move day shrinks the load. A leaner move moves faster through the elevator.
Self-packing saves both labor and material costs. A resident who boxes their own closets and kitchen removes hours from the crew's time. It also lets them control how their fragile items are wrapped.
The catch is doing it right. Boxes should be sealed, labeled, and not overloaded so the crew can stack them fast. Loose piles slow everything down.
We can deliver supplies and offer packing tips for anyone who wants to handle it themselves. That keeps the box count and hours in check.
A midweek move avoids the weekend rush and often the higher weekend rate. Tuesday through Thursday tends to have more crew availability. Buildings like The Emerson or Metropolis are also less crowded midweek.
Mid-month dates dodge the lease-turnover crunch. Since fewer people move mid-month, rates and elevator demand both ease. This off-peak timing is the easiest way to secure a lower rate.
Even shifting a move a few days can help. A Wednesday in the middle of the month is far cheaper than the last Saturday. Flexibility pays off.
We point residents toward the best-value dates whenever their schedule has room. Small timing changes add up.
A written estimate protects against surprises. It lists crew size, hours, materials, and any building fees in one place. That transparency lets a resident compare quotes fairly.
An itemized quote also shows where money can be saved. If packing is the biggest line, the resident can choose to pack themselves. If elevator time is a factor, they can book the window early.
Vague verbal quotes are the ones that grow on move day. A detailed document keeps everyone honest. We put every cost in writing so the final bill matches the plan.
Residents can request an itemized quote from our team through the contact page. We spell out transparent pricing before anyone commits.
A mover who knows DTLA towers saves clients time, money, and stress. Local movers understand the buildings, the streets, and the paperwork before they ever arrive. That knowledge is what separates a smooth move from a chaotic one.
Our Downtown LA experience comes from working these towers week after week. As high-rise specialists, we plan around the details that trip up out-of-town crews.
Every tower has its own management rules. Familiarity with buildings around South Park and Bunker Hill lets us handle the COI process and elevator paperwork fast. We often know a building's requirements before we even ask.
That building knowledge speeds up move day. When we already know a tower needs a COI submitted three days ahead, we file it on time. No last-minute panic at the security desk.
Knowing the elevator setup helps too. Some towers have a dedicated move elevator, while others share one car. We plan the crew and timing around each building's reality.
This experience turns building rules from a hurdle into a routine step. Residents never have to decode the paperwork alone.
Downtown traffic can wreck a schedule if a crew is not ready for it. Grand Ave, 7th Street, and Olympic Blvd all clog at predictable times. We plan routes and arrival windows around that congestion.
DTLA traffic also affects when the truck can reach the dock. Arriving before the worst gridlock keeps the day on track. Route planning is part of every Downtown job we take.
Parking strategy matters just as much. We know which blocks near a tower have loading zones and which need a permit. That planning keeps the truck close and the carry distance short.
Local know-how on traffic and parking keeps billed hours down. It is one of the quiet ways experience saves money.
Multi-step moves get easier with local storage nearby. When lease dates do not line up, having a facility close to Downtown keeps the second trip short. That cuts both time and cost.
Local storage also gives residents flexibility. Belongings can sit safely for a few days or a few months, then move into the new unit on schedule. Our long term storage covers both short and long gaps.
Moving support close to home means fewer logistics for the resident. One team handles the move-out, the storage, and the move-in. There is no juggling separate companies.
Residents across the region, from Los Angeles to nearby cities, use our nearby facility to bridge moving gaps. It keeps the whole process under one roof.
Popeye Moving & Storage serves Los Angeles and all of Los Angeles County.
A DTLA high-rise move costs more than a standard apartment move for real reasons. Elevator windows, loading docks, insurance rules, and long carries all add time. Studios run $400 to $800, one-bedrooms $700 to $1,400, and two-bedrooms $1,300 to $2,800 in most towers.
The final bill depends on packing, floor height, timing, and the building itself. Booking the elevator early, packing ahead, and moving midweek all lower the cost. A detailed written estimate keeps the whole process clear.
Popeye Moving & Storage Co. moves residents into Downtown towers every week, from South Park to the Historic Core. Our team handles the COI, the elevator booking, and the tight Downtown streets so residents do not have to. Call us or reach out through our contact page for an itemized quote on your studio, 1BR, or 2BR move.
A studio move in a Downtown tower usually runs $400 to $800. A two-person crew works 2 to 4 hours for most studios. The price rises with heavy items like Murphy beds, full packing services, or long waits at a shared freight elevator. It stays low when the unit is packed, the floor is low, and the building has a reserved dock. We give a firm number after reviewing the building.
A one-bedroom move runs about $700 to $1,400, while a two-bedroom runs $1,300 to $2,800. The gap comes from crew size and hours. A one-bedroom needs two or three movers for 3 to 5 hours, but a two-bedroom often needs three or four movers for 5 to 8 hours. More furniture and more elevator trips push the two-bedroom cost higher. Packing and specialty items widen the gap further.
Yes, most Downtown towers require a certificate of insurance, or COI, before move day. It proves the moving company carries liability coverage that protects the building. Many towers near Bunker Hill and South Park want it submitted days in advance for approval. Popeye Moving & Storage Co. issues these certificates for Downtown buildings as routine paperwork. Residents never have to chase it down, since we handle the filing with management directly.
Times vary by unit size and elevator access. A studio usually takes 2 to 4 hours, a one-bedroom 3 to 5 hours, and a two-bedroom 5 to 8 hours. Elevator waits are the biggest wild card. A shared freight elevator on a busy day can add an hour or more to any of these ranges. A reserved elevator window keeps the move on the shorter end of its range.
High-rise moves add steps that a ground-floor move never sees. Crews reserve and wait for freight elevators, carry items through long hallways, and file insurance paperwork with management. The walk from the dock to the unit can stretch several hundred feet each way. All of that adds labor hours. Building rules and timed elevator windows also require careful planning that a simple ground-floor move does not.
Building management usually requires the resident to book the freight elevator, since the lease is in their name. That said, our team helps coordinate the window with management so it lines up with the crew's arrival. We tell residents exactly what to request and when. Booking a solid window ahead of time cuts wait charges and keeps the move on schedule. We confirm the details before move day.
Weekend moves often cost more because demand is higher, especially at the end of the month. Saturdays near lease turnover fill up fast and carry peak rates. Midweek moves on Tuesday through Thursday usually have better rates and more crew availability. Buildings are also less crowded midweek, which speeds up elevator access. Shifting a move even a few days can lower the total cost.
Yes, our crews plan for the tight streets around Figueroa, Flower, and Olive before move day. We know which blocks have usable loading zones and which need a temporary permit from the city. When a building has a loading dock, we book the window so the truck parks at the entrance. Good parking planning keeps the carry distance short, which holds down billed hours. It is part of every Downtown job.
Yes, we offer short-term storage for gaps between move-out and move-in. Belongings load into a secure facility near Downtown, then deliver to the new unit when it is ready. This works for gaps of a few days or a few weeks. Local storage keeps the second trip short and the cost reasonable. We plan storage into the quote from the start when lease dates do not match up.
Share the building name, floor, and a rough inventory of large furniture and boxes. The more detail we have, the tighter the estimate. A quick phone call or video walkthrough lets us spot Murphy beds, pianos, or tricky elevators ahead of time. We then put every cost in writing, including crew, hours, materials, and any building fees. Reach out through our contact page for an itemized written estimate.
Popeye Moving & Storage Co. Team Team
Licensed moving and storage service professionals serving Los Angeles and Los Angeles County.
Licensed in California · License #PUC: CAL T 189749 | DOT: 1472924 | MC: 498816C
Why trust Popeye Moving & Storage?
Founded in 1994, Popeye Moving & Storage is a licensed and insured moving and storage service serving Los Angeles and Los Angeles County. All content is reviewed by our licensed technicians.
Popeye Moving & Storage serves Los Angeles and all of Los Angeles County.

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