BryanF wrote: » 2m max height at rear of house. See class 5
DeWanderer wrote: » Thanks. I was hoping that if it was fully on my side of the boundary (in my garden) that it could be higher. I'll have to rethink.
DeWanderer wrote: » I don't want to go in to specifics but basically neither us nor our children feel comfortable in our back garden.
sydthebeat wrote: » Nothing stopping you from applying for permission, or retention permission
GerardKeating wrote: » Is the issue security or privacy ? If the "new neighbour and his friends" are as undesirableas the OP suggests, they might object
DeWanderer wrote: » I'm aware that the maximum height for a boundary wall or fence is 2 metres in between back gardens.
GerardKeating wrote: » If the "new neighbour and his friends" are as undesirableas the OP suggests, they might object
DeWanderer wrote: » Thanks for all of the replies. The main issue is privacy. Security hasn't become an issue, as of yet. I'll have a think about it and may go with 2m or put in an application for 2.5m or a bit higher.
Mellor wrote: » That's the height without permission.If they are as undesirable as suggest they won't even notice the application going in
Doop wrote: » II also cant imagine the county council get many applications for boundary walls within housing estate back gardens.. yet many are over 2m... curious isnt it...;)
golfhead wrote: » 1. Is planning permission needed to build a wall higher than 2 metres even if your neighbours have no objection? 2. Is PP required if you want to build a 3m wall inside the boundary line and fully on your own property?
sydthebeat wrote: » 1. Yes. 2. Yes. On 2, the only way you can build a 3.0 m high wall is if it's part of an exempt extension
JackMN wrote: » What about a situation where the ground in one garden is higher than the other? I want to put up a fence that will be 2m tall as measured by my neighbour, but 2.3m tall measured from the garden on my side...
Lumen wrote: » That would be a 2.3m fence on your side, so requires planning. You can, AFAIK, build a fence on top of a berm, as long as the berm is less than 1m tall. But I could be wrong on that, I think the regs are worded so as to be a little vague as to where the measurement starts.
Yellow_Fern wrote: » What happens when the ground varies a lot on the two sides of the wall?
Lumen wrote: » The height is measured from the lowest point.
TheW1zard wrote: » What about putting fencing on top of the wall? So say 500mm fence on a 2m wall?
Quantum Erasure wrote: » what counts as an extension...
Mellor wrote: » Do you have a reference for that? It may well exist, but I don't remember any restriction in schedule 2
Quantum Erasure wrote: » would just a wall count? (altough i see if over ground floor level it has to be at least 2m from any boundary, so kinda rules that out)