Family relocations and international moving stories from Canada.
Family-first move planningDedicated sales and logistics teamsDestination story guidance across major routes
Huli logo
Huli brand spread Human storybook collage
International moving from Canada

A cleaner international moving site built around real routes and real quote flow

This draft keeps Huli's strongest legacy service and destination routes, removes the WordPress clutter, and makes the quote path the center of the experience.

01

International moving, freight, and vehicle shipping

02

Destination hubs retained from the legacy site

03

Contact and quote flow simplified

Family-first pacingDestination storytellingPractical motion
Editorial note

Warm neutrals, Huli orange, and navy keep the journey legible.

The collage keeps the route data intact, but slows the pacing so each step feels like a page in a family album.

Layered imagery Human pacing Brand-aligned
Stacked moving boxes in a warm interior.
Packing day

Boxes, labels, and the first layer of the story

The mosaic starts with the rooms people actually live in, not an abstract logistics diagram.

Warm Layered Human motion
Harbor containers and cranes at dusk.
Route line

A map that feels lived in

Routes, ports, and borders become a readable thread instead of a dense wall of service copy.

Warm Layered Human motion
Travelers arriving in a bright city street.
Arrival

Destination scenes with human scale

Each destination section makes room for neighborhoods, timing, and the emotional reset after the move.

Warm Layered Human motion
Family walking together with luggage and boxes.
Family moment

The handoff into a new home

A moving company should feel like part of the family transition, not just the freight event.

Warm Layered Human motion
Family relocation

Move planning laid out like an editorial spread

The home page now reads as a guided storybook: practical, warm, and clearer about what happens before the truck, container, or flight ever leaves.

Family-first pacing

Move planning leaves room for school calendars, work transfers, and the human side of relocation.

Destination storytelling

Route pages stay useful by explaining why families choose a destination and what usually comes next.

Practical motion

Interactive sections, graceful transitions, and layered imagery make the experience feel active without turning corporate.

Move layers

The operational pieces stay visible, just softer

Household goods, freight, vehicles, packing, and storage are still the core services. The difference is that they now sit inside a more human chapter structure.

Household moves

Plan partial or full-household shipments from Canadian origin points with a single quote path.

Freight modes

Match the shipment to ocean freight, air freight, or mixed-mode logistics based on speed, volume, and budget.

Vehicle shipping

Handle car, motorcycle, boat, and recreational vehicle transport alongside the rest of the move when needed.

Packing and storage

Add professional packing, staging, and monitored storage when move timing does not line up cleanly.

Destination map

Routes and destination hubs treated like story chapters

Instead of a flat directory, the destination cluster reads like a family journey atlas with regional and route-level emphasis.

North America

Canada-wide moves and Canada-to-US relocations stay visible as primary route clusters.

Asia and Middle East

Retained destination hubs cover paperwork-heavy moves where planning and sequence matter.

Europe and Latin America

Regional destination pages keep country-level traffic pointed to stronger modern hubs.

Australia, New Zealand, South Africa

Legacy high-intent destination routes remain first-class pages in the rebuild.

Route stories

Tap a destination to see the move as a sequence

Each panel combines a destination story, the usual decision points, and the services that matter most at that stage.

Destination

Moving across Canada with a simpler plan

The cross-country page stays focused on affordability, flexibility, and choosing the right transport plan for household goods moving between Canadian cities.

Cross-country household shipping

It treated cross-country moves as practical planning problems rather than generic van-line sales copy. The rewrite keeps that posture.

Flexible move size handling

It treated cross-country moves as practical planning problems rather than generic van-line sales copy. The rewrite keeps that posture.

Packing and storage add-ons when needed

It treated cross-country moves as practical planning problems rather than generic van-line sales copy. The rewrite keeps that posture.

Scene note

Human pacing for a route that still behaves like a route.

Editorial layers keep the destination story calm, readable, and brand-consistent without changing the underlying flow.

Stacked moving boxes in a warm interior.
Packing day

Boxes, labels, and the first layer of the story

The mosaic starts with the rooms people actually live in, not an abstract logistics diagram.

Economical route planning

Use shipment size and timing to avoid forcing every move into the same expensive pattern.

Partial to full-household scope

Retain the promise that a few boxes and larger household moves can live in the same workflow.

Move timing support

Bring packing, storage, and delivery staging into the conversation earlier.

Route atlas

Primary service, destination, and city pages

These pages still anchor the information architecture and now sit inside a softer editorial frame.

Office network

Canadian offices and contact points retained from the legacy site

The draft keeps the operational footprint visible while improving the path into the quote flow.

Quote flow

Capture the move details once, up front

This form follows the legacy quote intent more closely than the starter template by collecting origin, destination, and shipment type before follow-up.

Ready

FAQ

Questions the rebuild answers directly

How does Huli start a quote?

The quote workflow starts with origin, destination, shipment type, and contact details so the team can scope the move before follow-up.

Can services be mixed on one move?

Yes. The legacy site consistently positioned freight, vehicle shipping, packing, storage, and documentation support as add-ons around the main relocation plan.

Does the new site keep the old route structure?

The draft keeps the highest-value legacy slugs for services, destinations, city pages, contact, and quote flow to reduce migration churn.