Security
Gated access, surveillance cameras running around the clock, and a team that actually walks the lot. Your vehicle is here because you trust us, and we take that seriously.
Circle C Storage isn't a chain. It's a family-run yard on Van Buren Boulevard — Patrick and Mary Houston, keeping Riverside's vehicles safe for longer than most of our neighbors have lived here.
Circle C started simply: a piece of land, a fence, and a promise that when you parked your RV with us, it'd be exactly where you left it when you came back. That promise hasn't changed.
Patrick and Mary run the place together. Over the years we've added on — more space, U-Haul rental, a full repair facility — but the operation is still the same family running the front gate. We know our customers by name, and we know the rigs by sight.
When you ring Circle C, you get Mary, you get Patrick, or you get one of the family. No call centers, no automated menus, no being "the next available representative."
It's why our customers don't switch. The phone gets answered. The questions get real answers. The gate opens when you said you'd be there.
Gated access, surveillance cameras running around the clock, and a team that actually walks the lot. Your vehicle is here because you trust us, and we take that seriously.
The price we quote is the price you pay. No setup fees, no "facility maintenance" charges, no rate hikes we forgot to mention. What you see is what you get.
We're right off Van Buren Blvd, which means you can swing by on your way home or right before a trip. No detour, no hassle. Storage that fits your life, not the other way around.
A storage lot with a working TNR program built in.
Over the years a handful of strays found their way to our property and decided to stay. Rather than chase them off, we made room for them — and my wife Mary runs the cat side of the operation.
Every cat living on our lot has been trapped, taken to the vet, spayed or neutered, and brought back to the colony. It's called TNR — trap, neuter, return — and it's the only humane way to keep a feral cat population from growing. We feed them, we water them, and once a year or so, we make sure another generation isn't on the way.
The two pictured here are recovering after their vet visit. The fruit-shaped cones aren't a fashion statement — they keep the cats from licking their stitches. A few weeks later they're back outside, healthier, and not adding to the local stray population.
Most people don't notice this kind of detail. The ones who do tend to be the same ones who care about how their RV is treated. People who run a real TNR program tend to look after everything else too.
See the habitat & support the cats
Our 5-year-old Doberman and the four-legged half of our security team.
Rocky spends his days on the lot — sometimes greeting customers, more often making his rounds. He knows every rig that belongs here and notices anything that doesn't.
The cameras catch a lot. The gate catches more. Rocky catches what the cameras miss.
Between the surveillance, the lighting, the locked gate, and 90 pounds of attentive Doberman, not much gets past Circle C. That's by design.
Want a tour? Got a question only a person can answer? Give us a call.