When we set temporary fence in South San Francisco, we look at the site the same way we did on that Oyster Point biotech job after those early safety incidents — where the fence stood, how the wind moved through it, and where a weak point would show up first. Around Sign Hill and Orange Park, the ground openings and exposed corners matter just as much as the panel rating. We don’t guess at stability. We build it with real hardware and a layout that holds when the afternoon gusts kick up.
For longer runs, we look at panel spacing, base weight, and whether the line needs privacy windscreens or dust mesh to stay useful without turning into a sail. Our crew checks the low flood-zone ground near Orange Memorial Park, because soft edges and uneven grade change how a fence loads up in wind. That’s where our OSHA-trained approach pays off: we set it to stay put, not just to stand up for the first hour.