Cross-country household shipping
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.
Flexible move size handling
Packing and storage add-ons when needed
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.
Boxes, labels, and the first layer of the story
The mosaic starts with the rooms people actually live in, not an abstract logistics diagram.
A map that feels lived in
Routes, ports, and borders become a readable thread instead of a dense wall of service copy.
Destination scenes with human scale
Each destination section makes room for neighborhoods, timing, and the emotional reset after the move.
The handoff into a new home
A moving company should feel like part of the family transition, not just the freight event.
What the legacy page got right
It treated cross-country moves as practical planning problems rather than generic van-line sales copy. The rewrite keeps that posture.
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.
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.
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.