Steel Fence | North Hollywood

Close-up of black metal gate with spear-top anti-climb finials, with rooftops and hills in the background.

In North Hollywood—an area where break-ins and smash-and-grab incidents have become increasingly common—perimeter security often comes down to one simple question:

Can someone get their hands on the top edge and climb over in seconds?

This project focused on eliminating that “first move” by reinforcing the topline of a steel fence and gate with a continuous anti-climb deterrent. The goal was straightforward: raise the time, risk, and difficulty of an attempted entry—without compromising the clean, modern appearance of the property.

Close-up of black anti-climb spikes installed on top of a white perimeter fence in North Hollywood.
Continuous anti-climb line installed along the fence topline—designed to remove grip points and discourage fast climbs.

The Challenge: The Fence “Top Edge” Is Often the Weakest Point

Even with a solid steel fence, the top edge can become an easy access point if it provides:

  • a stable handhold
  • a smooth edge to hook onto
  • a consistent surface to pull up and swing over

In high-risk neighborhoods, intruders frequently choose the quietest, fastest route—not forced entry. That’s why reinforcing the perimeter’s highest leverage points matters.

The Solution: A Continuous Deterrent Line Across Fence + Gate

Rather than treating the fence and gate as separate elements, we approached the perimeter as a single security system and reinforced the topline using our Gothic anti-climb deterrent. The result is a continuous “no-grip” zone across the fence and gate—designed to discourage fast climbs while staying visually aligned with a modern exterior.

Key design principles:

1) Continuous coverage (no obvious starting point)

Gaps and short sections can unintentionally create a “start here” moment. A continuous run reduces those opportunities.

2) Gate integration (same strategy, same look)

Gates are a common climb target. Matching the deterrent line across the gate keeps protection consistent—and visually intentional.

3) Black finish for architectural alignment

The black profile complements modern exterior details (frames, lighting, metalwork). From the street it reads as a clean shadow line—up close it communicates “not climbable.”

Steel gate reinforced at the topline to prevent quick vaulting—blending security into the existing modern design.

Result: Low-Profile From a Distance, Clear Deterrence Up Close

The finished perimeter keeps the property’s clean look intact while removing the key elements intruders rely on:

  • grip points
  • pull-up leverage
  • quick swing-over access

This kind of upgrade is especially effective because it targets what intruders hate most:
extra time, extra noise, and extra uncertainty.

Project Snapshot

  • Location: North Hollywood, Los Angeles, CA
  • Scope: Steel fence + gate topline reinforcement
  • Product: Gothic (Black)
  • Objective: Reduce climb-over risk in a high-incident area
  • Approach: Continuous anti-climb deterrent for a seamless perimeter line

Thinking About a Similar Upgrade?

If your property has:

  • a flat or climbable fence top
  • a gate that can be vaulted
  • corners or posts that provide leverage

…reinforcing the topline is often one of the highest-impact perimeter improvements you can make.

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