PWW Services Inc.
Education
March 8, 2026 · 4 min read

Windrow Removal: Why Your Driveway Gets Blocked After the Plow

You've just spent 45 minutes clearing your driveway. Then the city plow rolls through and deposits a 3-foot wall of compacted snow and ice right across the end. That wall is called a windrow, and it's one of the most frustrating parts of winter.

What Is a Windrow?

A windrow is the ridge of snow left by a municipal plow as it clears the road. The plow pushes snow to the side, and anything in its path — including your driveway entrance — gets buried. Windrows are different from regular snowfall because the snow has been compressed by the plow blade, often mixed with gravel, sand, and ice chunks from the road surface.

Why Windrows Are Worse Than Regular Snow

Can You Prevent Windrows?

No. The city isn't going to lift their blades at every driveway. It's the cost of having plowed roads. Some homeowners try parking at the end of their driveways to block the windrow — this doesn't work and can result in vehicle damage or parking violations.

The Equipment Makes the Difference

A standard snow shovel is often not enough for a compacted windrow. You need mechanical force — a skid steer, compact loader, or at minimum a snowblower with enough torque to break through compressed snow and ice. PWW deploys appropriately sized equipment for windrow removal, matching the machine to the job so your driveway entrance is fully cleared without damaging the surface.

Adding Windrow Removal to Your Contract

If you already have a driveway or sidewalk clearing contract, adding windrow removal is straightforward. It triggers automatically whenever the city plows your street. No calls needed — our crews monitor city plow schedules and respond accordingly.

Windrow Removal Service

Add windrow removal to your seasonal snow contract and never dig out your driveway entrance again.

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