In a quiet residential neighborhood of Phoenix, a private home with a stucco perimeter wall was upgraded with Gothic installed continuously along the top edge.
The result is intentionally understated. From the street, the line reads clean and refined. Up close, the tips are sharply defined—clear enough to discourage any attempt to climb. It’s a “quiet deterrent” that fits the calm character of the neighborhood.

Why the design works
This exterior is built around two elements: the soft, textured depth of stucco and the European-style wrought-iron window grilles.
Gothic adds a crisp silhouette without overpowering either.
- The contrast of rough stucco and precise spikes sharpens the overall composition
- The heart cutout softens the visual tone while keeping the edge functional
- The profile complements the wrought-iron curves instead of competing with them
It feels less like “adding a security product” and more like finishing the architecture.

Installation highlights
- Continuous run along the wall top: removes obvious starting points for a climb
- Clean corner continuity: maintains the wall’s flow while reducing weak spots
- Low-visibility, high-effect placement: discreet at a distance, decisive up close
Summary: Elegant, but uncompromising
Gothic delivers real anti-climb performance with a refined presence—ideal for neighborhoods where exterior design matters as much as security.

A stronger perimeter, without sacrificing beauty.