Commercial Perimeters
Security-focused layouts for warehouses, storage facilities, offices, and contractor yards that need clear edge control and durable daily use.
Security Fence Installation
Evergreen Fence helps Richmond-area businesses plan security fencing around the real job of the site: perimeter control, gate reliability, deterrence, and traffic flow. These projects are usually less about generic fencing and more about how the whole access strategy works day to day.
Security-focused layouts for warehouses, storage facilities, offices, and contractor yards that need clear edge control and durable daily use.
Options such as razor wire, barbed wire, anti-climb approaches, and reinforced gate zones for sites with stronger deterrence requirements.
Gate operators, keypads, entry sequencing, and traffic planning that turn the fence into a working part of site security instead of just a boundary.
On commercial sites, the fence only works if the access points work. That means vehicle entry, employee movement, delivery circulation, lock control, and hardware durability have to be considered before the fence specification is finalized.
For some Richmond properties, that means a standard chain link security perimeter with upgraded gate planning. For others, it means heavier posts, added deterrent features, screened sections, or automation tied directly into access control.
The strongest projects treat the fence, gate operator, and site circulation as one system instead of three separate purchases.
Security fencing is most common for commercial and industrial sites, equipment yards, storage facilities, service areas, back-of-house operations, and any property where controlling access matters more than decorative appearance.
Yes, where the site, use case, and local requirements support it. Security projects often involve deterrent toppers such as barbed wire or razor wire, but the right specification depends on the risk level, property type, and code considerations.
Yes. Many security fence projects include access control elements such as keypads, card readers, automated gates, vehicle entry planning, and pedestrian control points.
No, but chain link is still the most common starting point because it balances speed, durability, and cost. Depending on the site, a security plan may also include anti-climb details, privacy slats, heavier posts, screening, and gate automation.
We can help you scope the perimeter, gate controls, deterrent features, and access plan before you commit to the wrong hardware or fence spec.
Good security fencing is not just taller fencing. It is a perimeter plan aligned with traffic, access control, and day-to-day site use.