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Back garden privacy

San_Jose
Posts: 43 Forumite

Hi all,
Wondering if anyone could give me some advise regarding making my back garden more private. We recently bought a new build with a decent size garden however the fence at the back and to the left of the garden backs onto a communal car park and a neighbours house - they can see directly into the garden as we are on the lower park of a slope. Each part of the fence is approx 5m (with standard height fence panels). Looking for some tips on making the area more private so its not so overlooked. I was thinking of planting some hedges/ trees but have no idea where to start in terms of what types of greenery to look at which grows fast/ high. Any tips or anything else to consider from experience would be much appreciated.
Wondering if anyone could give me some advise regarding making my back garden more private. We recently bought a new build with a decent size garden however the fence at the back and to the left of the garden backs onto a communal car park and a neighbours house - they can see directly into the garden as we are on the lower park of a slope. Each part of the fence is approx 5m (with standard height fence panels). Looking for some tips on making the area more private so its not so overlooked. I was thinking of planting some hedges/ trees but have no idea where to start in terms of what types of greenery to look at which grows fast/ high. Any tips or anything else to consider from experience would be much appreciated.
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Comments
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For more specific gardening advice I would suggest joining the Gardening Forum on Gardenersworld dot com. (Hope I'm not breaking any rules by doing this.
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If you don't want it to look like a dense hedge, then Portuguese Laurels but planted, say, at least a metre, possibly more, apart might be a good solution. This should provide a gentler screen, more like a series of tress/bushes rather than an impenetrable green barrier.Fast growing, evergreen, attractive from both sides! It shouldn't frighten people like a Leylandii hedge could.How tall would your screening need to grow?There's also various bamboos, but I understand these can be invasive if not handled properly. But again these should provide a gentler screening, far more attractive than a dense green wall, and also plays nicely in a breeze.2
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The easiest way to creat privacy for you directly is to have something like a 6ft screen directly next to where you sit.Everything that is supposed to be in heaven is already here on earth.
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San_Jose said:Hi all,
Wondering if anyone could give me some advise regarding making my back garden more private. We recently bought a new build with a decent size garden however the fence at the back and to the left of the garden backs onto a communal car park and a neighbours house - they can see directly into the garden as we are on the lower park of a slope. Each part of the fence is approx 5m (with standard height fence panels). Looking for some tips on making the area more private so its not so overlooked. I was thinking of planting some hedges/ trees but have no idea where to start in terms of what types of greenery to look at which grows fast/ high. Any tips or anything else to consider from experience would be much appreciated.
I'd start by checking the contract, deeds and planning records to see if there is anything which prevents you changing the existing boundaries and/or planting trees and hedges.
If the existing fences are around 1.8m high already then you won't be able to do much without definitely needing planning consent.
So plants - subject to any conditions and restrictions - may be your only option and it will take a while for anything to get established to that height without posing an ongoing and frequent maintenance liability.
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Consider that any tree or hedge will also have depth/spread as well as height, so you may end up losing useable garden space. It can also be difficult to maintain a tall, fast-growing hedge. Deciduous trees will drop their leaves in autumn, so messy and you lose privacy (though you may not be using the garden so much at that time of year). There are some nice columnar trees available - varieties of blossoming cherry, Acer and Liquidamber varieties "Silhouette" . Lots of evergreens like Cypress and Thuja are tall and narrow.If you just want to shield certain sightlines, then a garden structure (arch or gazebo) with climbing plants (roses, passiflora, clematis) might work."Cheap", "Fast", "Right" -- pick two.1
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Section62 said:San_Jose said:Hi all,
Wondering if anyone could give me some advise regarding making my back garden more private. We recently bought a new build with a decent size garden however the fence at the back and to the left of the garden backs onto a communal car park and a neighbours house - they can see directly into the garden as we are on the lower park of a slope. Each part of the fence is approx 5m (with standard height fence panels). Looking for some tips on making the area more private so its not so overlooked. I was thinking of planting some hedges/ trees but have no idea where to start in terms of what types of greenery to look at which grows fast/ high. Any tips or anything else to consider from experience would be much appreciated.
If the existing fences are around 1.8m high already then you won't be able to do much without definitely needing planning consent.
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Thanks for all your replies. Really appreciate your comments will look into some of the options suggested. I will also check the deeds of the house to check where I stand.
Bendy_House Maybe around 2.5m (the fence would be 1.8m of that already) so just tall enough that offers that bit more privacy and stops people potentially peering over.
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ka7e said:Consider that any tree or hedge will also have depth/spread as well as height, so you may end up losing useable garden space. It can also be difficult to maintain a tall, fast-growing hedge. Deciduous trees will drop their leaves in autumn, so messy and you lose privacy (though you may not be using the garden so much at that time of year). There are some nice columnar trees available - varieties of blossoming cherry, Acer and Liquidamber varieties "Silhouette" . Lots of evergreens like Cypress and Thuja are tall and narrow.If you just want to shield certain sightlines, then a garden structure (arch or gazebo) with climbing plants (roses, passiflora, clematis) might work.0
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Any fast growing shrub or tree will need constant pruning to keep it in check. If it is left any length of time, it can quickly turn in to a problem.
Her courage will change the world.
Treasure the moments that you have. Savour them for as long as you can for they will never come back again.3 -
Pleached trees is what I will doing in my similarly described new build.
Its not a Bellway is it ?
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