
PD Palmdale Fence serves Lake Los Angeles homeowners with security fencing, chain link, and privacy fence installation sized for the large lots, manufactured-home properties, and desert conditions of this Antelope Valley community. We have been working throughout the Antelope Valley since 2018 and reply to every inquiry within one business day.

Lake Los Angeles properties sit on large open lots where a visible perimeter fence is often the primary deterrent against trespassers and vehicle theft, both real concerns in this community. A properly anchored steel or wrought iron security fence, set deep enough for Antelope Valley winds, gives homeowners a defined, hard-to-breach boundary without requiring a full suburb-style enclosure. Learn more about our security fence installation services.
Chain link is the most practical perimeter solution for Lake Los Angeles properties, where lots run half an acre to a full acre or more and wind resistance matters as much as cost. Galvanized chain link handles the high desert wind corridor far better than solid panel fencing, and its open mesh means minimal wind load during Santa Ana events. It is also the most cost-effective way to secure a long rural perimeter.
Coyotes are active throughout Lake Los Angeles, and open desert lots with no defined yard boundary create serious risk for dogs left outside. We install pet-specific enclosures with heights and mesh sizing chosen to contain dogs and deter wildlife, giving homeowners a safe yard without having to fence the entire parcel. This is one of the most common requests we get from new homeowners in this community.
Many Lake Los Angeles homes sit on bare, open lots with long sight lines from the road, which makes a defined enclosed area directly around the house valuable for both privacy and security. Wood and vinyl privacy fencing used for the yard section immediately around the house complements a chain link perimeter on the outer boundary. UV-stabilized vinyl or pressure-treated wood are both appropriate choices for this high-desert climate.
Many homes in Lake Los Angeles were built and fenced between the 1950s and 1980s, and that original fencing is now approaching or past the end of its useful life. Wind events in the Antelope Valley are also a frequent cause of repair calls in this community, particularly after major Santa Ana wind seasons. Addressing fence damage quickly prevents a contained problem from expanding into a much larger replacement project.
Ranch-style and single-story homes on Lake Los Angeles lots are well-suited to wood fencing for the yard enclosure immediately around the house, where aesthetics matter more than wind exposure. We use pressure-treated posts as standard in this climate because Antelope Valley heat and low humidity dry out untreated wood within just a few years, causing cracking and early failure at the base.
Lake Los Angeles sits at roughly 2,700 feet in the Antelope Valley high desert, and the climate here puts fence materials under stress that most of Los Angeles County never sees. Summer temperatures regularly reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit or higher, UV radiation is intense, and winter nights drop below freezing from November through March. That freeze-thaw cycle loosens post footings and cracks concrete every single winter. On top of that, the Antelope Valley is a natural wind corridor, and Santa Ana events routinely push gusts past 50 miles per hour, which is enough to topple a fence that was not set with adequate post depth and concrete. A contractor who normally works in the coastal LA basin often does not account for all three of these stresses when bidding a job out here.
Most properties in Lake Los Angeles sit on lots that run from a half-acre to a full acre or more, and many homes were built between the 1950s and the 1980s during the wave of desert land sales that originally developed this community. The housing stock includes a significant share of manufactured and mobile homes alongside traditional ranch-style site-built houses, and fence posts and footings on these properties behave differently depending on the foundation type and soil conditions directly beneath them. Because Lake Los Angeles is an unincorporated community, permits run through Los Angeles County rather than a city building department, and the process for rural residential and large-lot fencing has its own requirements that contractors less familiar with this area may not handle correctly.
Our crew works throughout Lake Los Angeles regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect fence contractor work here. The community is an unincorporated part of Los Angeles County, so we pull permits through the LA County Department of Public Works Building and Safety Division rather than a city office, and we are familiar with how that process works for large-lot and rural residential properties in this zip code. We also come prepared for the caliche soil layer common throughout the Antelope Valley, which requires specialized equipment to drill or drive posts through at proper depth.
The community is oriented around the streets east of Palmdale, roughly between 110th Street East and 170th Street East, with most residential properties spread across the flat desert floor at around 2,700 feet elevation. Many properties have long unpaved or gravel driveways, and we plan material delivery and equipment staging so we are not damaging the property getting a truck to the fence line. We are also used to working on and around manufactured homes, which have their own considerations for fence post placement and anchoring near the structure.
We also serve Sun Village to the west, which shares similar soil and climate conditions with Lake Los Angeles, and Littlerock to the north along the Pearblossom Highway corridor. If you know a neighbor in either community who needs fencing work, we are already out there regularly.
We respond to every inquiry within one business day. Tell us roughly how much fence you need and whether you have any animals, gates, or HOA requirements, and we will schedule a free on-site estimate at your property in Lake Los Angeles.
We walk your property line with you, assess the soil, and discuss material options before quoting anything. The written quote you receive breaks down materials and labor, and it accounts for your specific lot conditions, including caliche soil if present, so there are no surprises when work begins.
If your project requires an LA County permit, we handle the application and processing on your behalf. We also call 811 before any digging begins, as required by California law, to have underground utility lines marked. Permit processing typically adds one to two weeks to the timeline, and we factor that into your schedule upfront.
Posts go in on the first day, panels or mesh on the second, and gates last. Before the crew leaves, we walk the completed fence with you to confirm every post is plumb, panels are flush, and the gate latches securely. We remove all debris from your property and leave you with care instructions.
We come out to Lake Los Angeles regularly. No minimum lot size, no travel fees. Call us or fill out the form and we will reply within one business day.
(661) 450-6304Lake Los Angeles is an unincorporated community in Los Angeles County, located in the Antelope Valley desert roughly 60 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles. The community takes its name from a dry lake bed that developers marketed as a future recreational lake starting in the 1950s. That lake was never filled, but the land sales that followed built up the residential community that exists today. Most homes were built between the 1950s and the 1980s, creating a housing stock that ranges from modest ranch-style homes to manufactured and mobile homes placed on large desert lots during that era. According to Wikipedia, the community has a population of roughly 12,000 to 14,000 people spread across the flat desert floor at about 2,700 feet elevation.
Properties in Lake Los Angeles tend to be large, with many lots running half an acre to a full acre or more. Most residents are long-term owner-occupants who moved here for affordable land and plan to stay. Palmdale and Lancaster are the nearest cities for shopping and services, and most residents commute to one of them or farther into the metro area. We also regularly serve homeowners in Pearblossom to the east and Palmdale to the west, and we treat Lake Los Angeles as a core part of our service area, not an outlying stop.
Beautiful, durable wood fences that add privacy and curb appeal to your property.
Learn MoreLow-maintenance vinyl fencing that stays looking clean year after year.
Learn MoreDependable chain link fencing that secures large areas affordably.
Learn MoreElegant, rust-free aluminum fences for lasting perimeter style and security.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty commercial fencing that protects your business property and assets.
Learn MoreSolid privacy fences so your yard stays yours, away from neighbors.
Learn MoreCode-compliant pool fencing that keeps families safe around the water.
Learn MoreRugged farm and ranch fencing that keeps livestock in and predators out.
Learn MoreConvenient automatic gates that add security and a premium entry experience.
Learn MoreClassic ornamental iron fencing with timeless beauty and outstanding durability.
Learn MoreHigh-security fencing solutions that deter intrusion and protect your perimeter.
Learn MoreProfessional staining and sealing that extends the life of your wood fence.
Learn MoreFull fence replacement that transforms your property with a fresh, solid fence.
Learn MoreCall us today or request a free estimate online. We serve Lake Los Angeles and the surrounding Antelope Valley communities with no travel fees and no minimum lot size.