Old Gilroy neighborhood fence setup that fits the block
Old Gilroy has that older, working-neighborhood feel, and we set fences there like we’re protecting a block we already know. The lots around the post-war homes run tight, so we measure the approach first, then place panels where trucks, walkers, and neighbors won’t get boxed out. After the 2007 storm work Ramiro saw around old downtown Gilroy, we learned that a site can go sideways fast if the fence shifts or the gate drags. That’s why we bring concrete steel bases, wind load resistance, and fence blow over prevention into the plan from the start. We get it there fast, and we keep it up.
Site Preparation Checklist
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Old Gilroy neighborhood sites often sit in older post-war lots, so we plan fence runs around single-story Ranch-style footprints and narrow access lanes.
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We use wind-load resistance, concrete steel bases, and zero-trip-hazard setups when crews, deliveries, and neighbors share the same block.
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After heavy rain or a quick hot spell, we check gate swing, panel footing, and dust control mesh because old Gilroy weather swings from wet ground to dry, blown-out soil fast.
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Ramiro Salazar's crew keeps 24-7 dispatch, emergency fencing, and temporary gates ready for storm recovery work.
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We also lean on dust control mesh, interlocking hooks, and wheel-assisted gates when a site stays open near Las Animas Park or along neighborhood streets.
| Old Gilroy need | What we set up | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Older residential blocks near San Ysidro and Rod Kelley | chain link panels with zero trip hazard layout | Keeps foot traffic moving without snagging driveways or sidewalks |
| Weather swings around 783 cooling degree days and summer heat | dust control mesh plus wind load resistance | Helps the line hold up when dust, gusts, and dry ground show up |
| Storm recovery near Las Animas Park and nearby streets | emergency fencing and temporary gates | Lets our crew lock down the site quickly and keep access controlled |

