Fire Defense
& Property Security
A systematic approach to fire risk on hillside properties — from defensible space to suppression infrastructure, access gates to water supply.
Fire is not a
distant possibility here
La Habra Heights sits in a Class 4 fire hazard zone. The chaparral that makes the hillsides beautiful in October is the same fuel load that worries every experienced property owner by July. Over 45 years of working on these properties, I have watched fire risk awareness cycle in and out of homeowner attention — and I’ve seen what it costs when the preparation wasn’t there.
Wildfire defense on a hillside property is not a single project. It is a sequence of decisions about vegetation, infrastructure, access, water storage, and detection — made in the right order, maintained over time, and understood by everyone who uses the property.
This page outlines how I think about that sequence. The site plan below is a working illustration — not a permitted engineering drawing, but a genuine framework for how a defensible hillside property can be organized.
Five things that actually matter
on a hillside in fire country
Every property is different. Lot shape, slope direction, access road width, proximity to canyon edges, existing vegetation — all of it shapes the right approach. But the structure of the problem is consistent across properties, and I’ve arrived at five organizing principles after working enough fires and enough close calls on these hillsides.
Terrain, access, and
real hillside conditions
These photographs are from actual La Habra Heights and Southern California hillside properties — the terrain, slopes, and access conditions that define the fire defense problem on your lot.
Visualizing the defended
hillside property
These AI-generated concept illustrations show how a fire-defended hillside property might look — a perimeter fence system, suppression infrastructure, and controlled access organized around a typical La Habra Heights estate.
They are conceptual only, produced to help property owners visualize the framework before a site-specific plan is developed.
A brass nozzle on the iron fence post — water arc hitting the house, flames on the hillside behind. The system working as designed. AI illustration.
AI concept illustrations · Not photographs · © KAB/LSI
How a defended hillside
property is organized
The site plan below illustrates one approach to fire suppression and security on a typical La Habra Heights property — 1.5 to 2 acres, hillside lot, canyon exposure. The layout shows perimeter fencing, a controlled entry gate, pool-fed copper suppression lines, nozzle placement on both the inner security fence and the master suite yard, and the relationship between water source, pump house, and distribution. Every property requires a site-specific plan, but this framework captures the logic that applies across most LHH properties.
Advisory illustration only · Not a permitted engineering drawing · Keith Bennett · Private Spaces · La Habra Heights CA
What oversight of a fire-ready
property actually involves
The site plan is a conceptual framework. What translates it into a real property is ongoing attention — seasonal, methodical, and documented. Before fire season: brush clearance verification, nozzle pressure testing, pump fuel check, gate function test, coordination with your landscape contractor on Zone 1 maintenance. After fire season: assessment of any damage, review of what worked and what didn’t.
I work from a 13-screen security camera office in La Habra Heights. I watch properties remotely, drop in on site when contractors are present, and report directly to owners who aren’t available to be there themselves. For busy professionals who own a hillside property and can’t be present every week — that’s the gap I fill.
Fire defense infrastructure that isn’t maintained is worse than none. A nozzle that hasn’t been tested fails at the moment it matters. A pump with stale fuel doesn’t start. A clearance zone that was done once three years ago has grown back. The value of stewardship is exactly this: catching the gap before the event, not after.
Fire defense infrastructure that isn’t maintained is worse than none.
Keith Bennett · Private Spaces
The entry gate question comes up on almost every property I work on. Owners are sometimes reluctant — it feels like an inconvenience for guests, a statement about distrust of the neighborhood. What I tell them is this: the gate isn’t primarily about security. It’s about access control during an event, and about defining the perimeter that fire personnel will work with.
On hillside properties, the gate is infrastructure — the same category as the copper lines and the pump.
Keith Bennett · Private SpacesA controlled entry with a coded gate and clear driveway clearances gives Cal Fire a staging point. It gives you an evacuation route that isn’t blocked by well-meaning neighbors. It gives the suppression system a defined perimeter to defend. On these properties, the gate is infrastructure — the same category as the copper lines and the pump.
The house above Laurel Canyon that wouldn’t stop moving.
A hillside above Laurel Canyon — the slope failed, and the city red-tagged every house below. Lawsuits followed against the city, the county, and whoever owned the slope. The house nearby had once been connected to Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel. © KAB/LSI
This photograph was taken from the roof of a concrete and steel hillside residence we were working on — months of construction, fire-resistant, glass facing the ocean side of the canyon. Looking across, the neighbors were watching a house on the facing hillside and talking about it constantly. Every time it rained, it was back in the news.
The city red-tagged homes below it. Lawsuits followed — against the city, against the county, against whoever owned the slope.
A hillside in Laurel Canyon · Los AngelesThe city red-tagged homes below it. Lawsuits followed — against the city, against the county, against whoever owned the slope. For months at a stretch it was threatening to come down entirely.
We didn’t know it at the time — but the canyon we were looking across had its own history. Dark, colorful, and very Los Angeles. The house nearby had once been connected to Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel.
The properties that survive aren’t the biggest ones. They’re the ones where someone understood the terrain — and built a system before the fire season, not during it.
Keith Bennett · Private Spaces · 45 years
Born in Brooklyn in 1906 to Russian Jewish immigrants, he was running extortion rackets by age fourteen. He formed the Bugs and Meyer Gang with Meyer Lansky — a partnership that evolved into Murder, Incorporated, the American mob’s national enforcement arm. He admitted to killing over a dozen men personally.
Movie-star handsome. Sent west in 1936 to run the California rackets. He pushed aside the LA mob boss, ran offshore gambling ships, and extorted Hollywood studios through union manipulation. He became a fixture at parties with Clark Gable, Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra, and Jean Harlow. He wanted to be in pictures. He settled for running them.
In the mid-1940s, Lansky sent him to Las Vegas. He poured $6 million of mob money into the Flamingo Hotel — tuxedoed staff, a golf course, private sewage pipes in every room. The mob suspected he was skimming. On June 20, 1947, while reading the Los Angeles Times on Virginia Hill’s sofa in her Beverly Hills home, nine rifle rounds came through the window. He was hit four times. One shot knocked his eye from its socket. He was 41. Only five people attended his funeral. The Flamingo became the anchor of the Las Vegas Strip. Bugsy Siegel built modern Las Vegas. He just didn’t live to see it.
The granite house that couldn’t slide.
The photograph of Bugsy Siegel’s mansion was taken from our build site on the opposite hillside — across Laurel Canyon. Laurel Canyon is the cut that links Los Angeles and Beverly Hills to the San Fernando Valley. Hundreds of thousands of cars a day move through it. If Bugsy’s house had come down, the road would have been closed for weeks.
The lot we were building on had never sold. The city deemed it unbuildable. Granite bedrock rose straight from the curb — not compressed clay, not sandstone. Granite. We cut into it. Chipped the rock out, shaped a footprint, placed forms against the stone, and poured cast-in-place concrete directly against the bedrock. Three stories of structural concrete, steel, and glass — cast into the mountain itself.
The fourth level is an observation deck — and above that, a small grass lawn, a fifth level. From the deck, you can see Bugsy’s mansion across the canyon, and the slope failure scarring the hillside behind it. Our build will never face that problem. Not because of luck. Because it’s anchored in granite. Cast concrete is also fire-resistant — the same principle that runs through the rest of this page. The image slider below shows the build from ground cut to finished deck.
The System — Layer by Layer
Fire appears on the hillside. The pool-fed pump pressurizes. Roof and eave nozzles create a water curtain over the structure. Then the inner fence corner nozzles activate — sweeping inward to protect the house, sweeping outward to cool and defend the suppression hardware itself.
Inner fence to house wall: 30 ft (design spec)
Eave nozzle throw (vertical): ~18–22 ft
Roof nozzle throw (down slope): ~12–16 ft
Outward fan cooling radius: ~40–60 ft into landscape
* All distances approximate — pending hydraulic engineering
* Enclosure design subject to fire engineer review
Is your hillside property
ready for fire season?
One short conversation covers the property, the terrain, the current state of your defensible space, and what the next right step is. No pitch — just an honest read.
Send a 1-paragraph noteNo charge to begin. The in-person stewardship review is priced in conversation.





