Universal City, California

Bee Removal in Universal City, CA

Hillside settlement at the mouth of the Cahuenga Pass.

Universal City is a small, dense hillside community at the Cahuenga Pass junction, and its bee removal conditions are defined by that geography. Steep lots, retaining walls, and older hillside construction on irregular grades accumulate more potential nesting sites than flat residential neighborhoods: cinder block retaining walls develop cavities, wood-frame structures on steep grades have crawl spaces and underfloor access that are rarely inspected, and dense hillside landscaping keeps foraging pressure high year-round. The Cahuenga Pass itself is a vegetation corridor between the San Fernando Valley and the Los Angeles basin, and wild colonies use that passage in both directions during spring swarm season. Properties on the Hollywood Hills side of the pass, along Cahuenga Blvd West and the streets above it, see consistent April-May swarm activity. Once a colony establishes in a retaining wall or under-structure cavity on a steep hillside property, access for extraction is more technically demanding than a standard single-story wall job.

  • Licensed & Insured

    CA Lic. SPCB7831. Fully covered for residential and commercial work.

  • Live Humane Removal

    Eco-responsible treatment. Every colony relocated alive.

  • Fast Local Response

    Same-day availability for active swarms.

  • 20+ Years Experience

    Two decades removing and relocating colonies.

Our Services in Universal City

24/7 Emergency Bee Removal

Same-Day Response

Aggressive swarm or active hive in Universal City? We respond same-day across Los Angeles County.

Serving Universal City and the surrounding Los Angeles County area

Before and After

Beehive colony in a residential wall before removalClean wall and relocated colony after professional removal

Every removal includes complete extraction and professional sealing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Retaining wall removals depend on the wall type. Concrete block retaining walls have hollow cores that bees colonize easily. We access the hive cavity, extract the colony live, remove the comb, and seal the opening. Stone walls require slightly different access, but the approach is the same. Hillside retaining wall jobs are a regular job type for us in this zone.
Sub-deck cavities are accessible if there's crawl space underneath. We'd assess the access first. If the cavity is reachable, extraction proceeds the same way as any enclosed space , live removal, full comb clean-out, sealed.
Exposed rafter-tail entries are a regular job type in the Cahuenga Pass hillside neighborhoods. The cut end of a wood rafter at the eave line is a natural entry point , it's unprotected wood with a gap directly into the soffit cavity. Access is from a ladder at the eave line; we locate the rafter with the active colony, extract the bees live, and seal the rafter end and the soffit gap. This type of entry is straightforward once located.
A swarm at rest on a fence or wall surface is still in transit mode , it hasn't established. If you see bees actively going in and out of a specific gap in the structure, that's establishment. Resting swarms can be collected quickly before they find an entry point; established colonies require full extraction.
The main difference is access logistics , ladder positioning, working at height on sloped terrain, and navigating tight clearances common on hillside properties. We factor this into scheduling. The removal process itself is the same.

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Licensed by California Structural Pest Control Board | Lic. No. SPCB7831