Security Guard in Palos Verdes Estates, CA

Security Guard Services in Los Angeles County

Need a security guard in Palos Verdes Estates? Stealth Watch Security offers armed and unarmed guards to protect your business or home.

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Security Guard Benefits

Advantages of Guards

  • A guard helps stop crime.
  • Guards watch for threats.
  • They respond to problems quickly.
  • Guards promote safety.
  • A security guard wearing a blue jacket and black cap stands in a busy indoor area, communicating through a handheld radio. The background is blurred, showing people walking around.

    About Our Guards

    Serving Los Angeles County

    Stealth Watch Security provides security guard services in Palos Verdes Estates. We protect your property, employees, and customers. Our guards are trained to handle different situations. We offer armed guards, unarmed guards, and patrols in Los Angeles County.

    A person wearing a black jacket with "SECURITY" written on it stands in front of a modern glass building. The background includes a railing and blurred greenery.

    The Guard Process

    How We Place Guards

  • Evaluation: We evaluate your needs.
  • Planning: We develop a security plan.
  • Placement: We place a guard at your location.
  • A security guard in a black uniform and cap stands in a parking garage, facing away from the camera. They are holding a walkie-talkie to their ear, surrounded by parked cars.
    A security guard wearing sunglasses, a cap, and a black security jacket stands alert in a brightly lit shopping mall. The background is blurred, showcasing a modern retail environment.

    CA Security Guards

    Keeping Los Angeles County Safe

    Stealth Watch Security offers security guard services in Palos Verdes Estates, CA.

  • Commercial security: Protect your business.
  • Residential security: Protect your home.
  • Event security: Safety at events.
  • Our patrol division provides mobile security in Palos Verdes Estates. Call us at 562-448-6759.

    View Our Armed Security Services

    About Stealth Watch Security

    Contact us

    Palos Verdes Estates was established as a subdivision in 1923, with 3,200 acres (1,300 ha) carved out of the former Rancho Palos Verdes property of over 16,000 acres (6,500 ha). Frank Vanderlip established both a land syndicate holding the Palos Verdes peninsula, and a real estate development trust for the Palos Verdes Estates subdivision. The Commonwealth Trust Company filed the Palos Verdes Protective Restrictions in Los Angeles County in 1923. These restrictions established rules for the developer and all land owners. The developer was required to set aside half of the land for common use, including roads and parks, but also to build bridle paths, a golf course, and retain several miles of coastline free of development. No less than ninety percent of the remaining land was required to be used for single-family homes.

    The designers of Palos Verdes Estates, Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. and Charles Cheney, used deed restrictions as a method of controlling development of the subdivision, even after many of the lots would have already been sold. The deed restrictions prohibited nuisance businesses, such as polluting industries, but also bars and cemeteries. The deed restrictions also included an exclusionary racial covenant which forbid an owner from selling or renting a house to anyone who wasn’t Caucasian. They were also not permitted to have African-Americans on their property with the exception of chauffeurs, gardeners, and domestic servants. The “sundown rule” was strictly in effect, and it wasn’t until 1948 when such restrictions were declared unconstitutional. Yet, it took 20 more years until the Fair Housing Act was passed in 1968 for the reality of the civil rights protections to take hold. An art jury reviewed all building plans, regulating any structure in regard to style, material, and even small details like color and the pitch of the roof. The construction of fences and hedges were subject to evaluation by the art jury.

    At the time of the city’s incorporation in 1939, the business and shop area around Malaga Cove had most of the Peninsula’s earlier buildings. The Malaga Cove Plaza building of the Palos Verdes Public Library, designed by Pasadena architect Myron Hunt, was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. Palos Verdes Estates was one of the earliest masterplanned communities in the United States.

    Learn more about Palos Verdes Estates.