
Same licensed local team (CA ACO 7755), with design decisions shaped by Silver Lake's actual housing stock, layout and security context — not a generic LA template.
You can't sensor every pane, and motion-only coverage triggers after entry. Our glass-heavy design: acoustic glassbreak sensing zoned per glass line, interior 'trap' motion coverage on the paths an intruder must cross, shock sensing on vulnerable sliders, and exterior cameras covering approaches BEFORE the glass — deterrence and evidence starts outside. Paired with video-verified monitoring, that's a system built for how these homes actually get entered.
Silver Lake's public stairways and walk-streets create pedestrian approaches that never cross a driveway — camera plans here cover stair landings and side paths, not just the front door. Stilt and platform homes get under-house zone attention (storage, utilities, access panels). Reservoir-adjacent blocks with heavy foot traffic benefit from clear property-line camera definition to keep footage useful and neighbors comfortable.
Flush ceiling speakers, in-wall Lutron keypads that read as intentional, cameras in charcoal housings against dark trim, no plastic boxes on stucco: the visual standard here is 'was that always there?'. Typical scopes: monitored security + 4–8 camera systems ($4,000–$12,000), Lutron lighting scenes, and vinyl-era hi-fi integration in listening rooms — a very Silver Lake request we happily serve.
Layered design: acoustic glassbreak sensors zoned per glass line, interior trap motion coverage, shock sensors on sliders, and exterior cameras covering approaches before the glass. Door-sensor-only kits structurally can't protect this architecture.
Yes — it's a geometry problem we design for specifically: stair landings, side paths and pedestrian approaches get coverage, since these routes never cross a driveway where default cameras point.
No — flush mounts, finish-matched housings, in-wall keypads and zero visible conduit are the standard. The goal is systems a design-conscious owner never has to explain.
Yes — Innov8av holds California Alarm Company Operator license ACO 7755, is insured and bonded, and has served all of LA County since 2016 with the same local technician team for installation and service.
Call (805) 517-4668 or book a free consultation online. After a walkthrough, you receive an itemized written proposal — equipment models, labor, materials and monitoring listed separately — typically within 48 hours.
Related: LA cost & permit guide