Thanks, Brad, and good evening, everyone. Page 23 shows a high-level summary of the quarter. Clearly, the quarter and the revised outlook did not play out as we expected coming out of Q2, although we see plenty of bright spots that give us confidence our model is working and positioned for the recovery when markets stabilize. For context, in the last two years, we've seen the largest contraction of nonresidential construction square footage since the global financial crisis. That contraction has been longer and deeper than we expected and has impacted volumes. However, those volume headwinds are moderating as we progress into 2025. Meanwhile, margins are improving as expected as we progress through the year, given both the flexibility in our cost structure and structural improvements we've implemented leveraging our technology platform. Free cash flow remains stable and predictable with best-in-class free cash flow conversion and free cash flow margin and with adjusted free cash flow per share increasing by 13% to $3.12 over the last 12 months. ROIC remains stable and supports economic value creation, and we are back to allocating capital across organic opportunities, tuck-ins and shareholder returns, which has been a quite effective formula historically and gives us a familiar playbook heading into 2025. So we remain quite confident in our strategy, our unique platform and capabilities and the strength of the WillScot team. Turning to page 24. Revenue of $601 million declined 1% year-over-year, driven primarily by volume headwinds impacting both storage leasing revenues and delivery and installation revenues, which were down 13% and 1%, respectively. These were offset by modular leasing revenues in VAPS, which were up 4% and 1%, respectively, as well as sales revenue. So overall, no real change to the recent trend of solid modular results offsetting storage. Value-added products penetration for modular units inflected positively this quarter, which we've been expecting for some time with average rates up 3% year-over-year and delivered rates in the third quarter up 1% versus prior year. Storage value-added products continue to grow rapidly with average rates up 28% and delivered rates over the last 12 months, up 16%. Growth of these penetration rates in a challenging market and competitive environment is a testament to the underlying customer value proposition, and I'm excited about other systemic improvements we're putting in place heading into next year to present our turnkey offering more effectively. There were no real changes to pricing trends in the quarter. Average monthly rental rates were stable across the portfolio with storage average monthly rental rates up 9.5% and modular average monthly rates up 6%. In terms of profitability, we generated $260 million of adjusted EBITDA, up 1% year-over-year at a margin of 44.4%, which itself was up approximately 50 basis points versus last year and up 80 basis points sequentially. We always expected margins to expand in the second half of the year, so we continue to be pleased with our margin trajectory heading into 2025. That said, revenues came in light in the quarter relative to our expectations. So we offset that with over $20 million of variable cost reductions that were executed during the quarter. That variable cost reduction built on the approximately $40 million of annualized indirect cost takeout that we executed in Q2. So based on that, we expect continued sequential margin expansion into Q4 and another year of modest expansion for the full year next year based on initiatives we have in place heading into 2025. As we disclosed back in September, in Q3, we incurred approximately $203 million of broken deal costs, including the McGrath termination fee, and we have backed these out of the adjusted financial metrics to isolate our operating performance. This resulted in adjusted EBITDA of $267 million, adjusted income from continuing operations of $72 million, adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.38 and adjusted free cash flow per share of $0.77 for the quarter and $3.12 over the last 12 months. Moving to Page 25. Cash provided by operating activities continues to be quite strong and would have totaled $202 million in the quarter or up 6% year-over-year, excluding broken deal costs. Net capital expenditures were up $16 million year-over-year to $59 million, primarily due to a large property sale last year and accelerating organic run rates in our newer product lines. Again, excluding broken deal costs, adjusted free cash flow for Q3 was $143 million with a 24% margin. So we continue to feel very good about our free cash flow trajectory heading into 2025 and the overall cash conversion efficiency of our business model. Over the last 12 months, adjusted free cash flow totaled $583 million at a 24% margin, which represents $3.12 of adjusted free cash flow per share on our September 30 share count. That's up over 13% versus the prior year LTM period and represents an 8% free cash flow yield on today's market capitalization. So cash flow visibility remains an incredible strength of the business. Free cash flow per share is compounding at mid-teens rates in a down market, and we remain on track towards our $4 free cash flow per share milestone and our longer-term $700 million free cash flow milestone. Turning to Page 26. Leverage ticked up one cent of a turn in the quarter to 3.4 times net debt to last 12 months adjusted EBITDA due to payment of deal breakage costs and resumption of share repurchases. We remain inside our target leverage range of 3.0 to 3.5 times, and we have the capacity to deleverage by approximately one turn per year when we so choose. So we are unconstrained from a capital allocation standpoint. Between our internally generated cash flow and our $1.7 billion of revolver availability, we have significant excess liquidity. Taking into account our interest rate swaps, our debt structure is approximately 89% fixed and 11% floating rate. So we have limited immediate interest rate exposure and have opportunities to refinance higher coupon bonds opportunistically if interest rates continue to moderate. As of September 30, 2024, our weighted average pre-tax cost of debt stands at 5.8%. I'll note our 2025 senior secured notes mature in June next year. We have ample liquidity available to simply draw on our ABL revolver and repay the 2025 notes. So between internally generated cash flow, available ABL capacity in the bond market or some combination thereof, we have multiple options to refinance the 2025s at a time of our choosing and to optimize our cost of capital. Page 28 shows our capital allocation over the last 12 months, which remains largely consistent with the framework we outlined at our 2021 Investor Day. In the right-hand chart, over the last 12 months, net CapEx of $231 million is very much in line with our framework target and likely increases into our guidance range of $250 million to $280 million by the end of the year. Over the last 12 months, we allocated $164 million to tuck-in acquisitions, which were primarily in the cold storage and Clearspan product lines during this period. And over the last 12 months, we have reduced our share count by approximately 3.3% and returned $286 million to shareholders. We've highlighted the $212 million of broken deal costs over the LTM period, the majority of which were in Q3 this year. However, those are behind us, and it's easy to see how that capital will be reallocated to shareholder returns in our framework as we move forward. Just as an example, the 13% free cash flow per share growth that we delivered over the past year would have been in the high teens had we allocated that capital to the repurchase. So based on the strong returns and our cash flow visibility, our Board of Directors increased our share repurchase authority again in September to $1 billion. And overall, we continue to see between $800 million and $1 billion of capital available annually to allocate, which is critical to how we compound returns. Heading into 2025, our capital allocation framework is consistent with how we've operated for the last several years. And to the extent we make adjustments, we will discuss that rationale with you in detail at our next Investor Day. Before turning it back to Brad, page 28 shows our outlook for 2024. Based on our performance year-to-date and our visibility into Q4, we revised our outlook to a midpoint of $1.60 billion of adjusted EBITDA, which reflects the reality that nonresidential construction markets are likely to continue bottoming into the first half of 2025 as customers get more certainty around the political and interest rate landscape. That is longer and deeper than we expected, and we've reduced our revenue assumptions primarily for Q3 and Q4 relative to our prior outlook. That said, volume headwinds do continue to moderate as we progress into 2025, although not to the full degree we expected in July. But this still represents a meaningful improvement relative to our run rate entering 2024. Also on the positive side, we are absolutely seeing the margin expansion that we expected in the second half even despite meaningful operating leverage headwinds from lower volumes. So while we are disappointed with the short-term result, our longer-term trajectory towards stronger margins, free cash flow and return on invested capital are all clear and would respond powerfully when markets stabilize, which is what we still anticipate in our base case for 2025. So we at least want to share our current framework for thinking about that year. Our base case sitting here today assumes non-res starts will flatten in 2025 in contrast to the double-digit declines we've incurred all year. This supports moderating volume headwinds as we progress through the year, which we are beginning to see. And we do see opportunities for improved commercial execution in certain areas, and we have very tangible growth across some of the newer product lines. That combination supports modest organic revenue growth for the year and continued margin expansion in 2025, which we think is a balanced acknowledgment of both the recent deceleration and the underlying longer term opportunities. Obviously, we'll be prepared for all scenarios, and we'll be actively developing upside opportunities. So sitting here today, this is generally the organic framework we are using to set our internal targets for the year. As always, we strive for transparency with our operating assumptions, welcome insights from our shareholders, have high expectations for our team and appreciate the ongoing partnership with our over 85,000 customers. We look forward to meeting with many of you before the holidays and welcoming you to our second Investor Day in the first half of next year, most likely in Phoenix with details coming soon. So with that, Brad, any closing thoughts?