No, Palisades and Malibu to the west are a series of north-south canyons and ridges that are excellent at funneling Santa Ana winds down in a rushing vortex to the sea. It's almost like an accordion in terms of topography. At the bottom of many of these canyons are road and houses, often with ranch-type property where people keep horses for trail riding. At the top of the ridges are trails for hiking and horseback riding. These are really prized areas for the privacy, amount of land available, and exclusiveness of them. However, they have terrible fire risks for the topography. The more glitzy Pacific Palisades you saw before the fire was an area where the ridge was wider and it was much easier to build on, plus the stunningly beautiful Pacific Ocean views were extremely desirable. The first disaster footage from Palisades showed how there was only one road to get from the lower, flatter residential areas to the higher residential areas. Pacific Palisades road was two lanes in each direction, but there were no side roads to go around so firefighters were trying to go up and panicked residents were trying to flee going down. To the east, there was a "fire road" that ran from the upper Palisades to the lower Palisades. From the google images, it looks not well-maintained, with cracked pavement and at least one area where there might be bollards on it. It would be unusable also because, tragically, it was on the side where the fire started and would have been in the middle of the flames as they pushed downhill. There looks to be a metal gate at the south end of the fire road that makes it impossible to get farther south to evacuate.
The Pacific Palisades Road on the left of the image, with the barely visible fire road to the right, near the Pacific Hills Recreation Center tag.
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Zoomed in on the Fire Road
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At this level of a Google topography map, you can clearly see the parallel ridges and canyons.
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