Film, Media & TV1 min ago
fence and trellis height
5 Answers
i have recently put a drive in the front of my house and now the neighbour has put up a 2 metre high trellis against his 1 metre high fence which has been there for more than 20 years because he said he does not want to see my car in my drive .Now when i want to drive my car out of my drive i have a problem seeing if any pedestrian is walking along the foot path or any child on a small trike is cycling along , this fence structure i feel has now caused a saftey issue which the local council has given its blessing. how do i stand to this issue i thought line of sight was a 600mm high fence or wall and 2 metres back from the path was the law in this matter
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No best answer has yet been selected by mad fencer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Whenever we fence down to the public footpath and the fence is higher than 3', we always slope the last section down to about 3' for safety - it also looks far better and neater. A trellis is easily cut in this fashion and hopefully your neighbour will see the sense in such a compromise and you will all be happy!
There is very unlikely to be any legal obligation on your neighbour and the local council will not want to know. The sight lines you refer to relate to situations when an individual wishes to seek permission for a new access onto the public highway.
The only place you can consider looking is in the land title of your own property to see if there is a restrictive convenant placed on the height of structures at the front of the property - and even then this will almost certainly relate to permanent structures not bushes and plants.
The best way is through sensible reasoning with the neighbour.
The only place you can consider looking is in the land title of your own property to see if there is a restrictive convenant placed on the height of structures at the front of the property - and even then this will almost certainly relate to permanent structures not bushes and plants.
The best way is through sensible reasoning with the neighbour.