Crystal Palace's sloping gardens and varied property boundaries demand fencing that works harder than most. From the steep inclines of Church Road to the level plots near the park, every installation tells its own story.
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Those Victorian terraces lining Westow Hill weren't built with modern privacy in mind. Today's homeowners face unique challenges - narrow access paths, shared boundaries that haven't been touched since the 1890s, and gradient changes that would make a mountain goat nervous. Panel fencing transforms these quirky Crystal Palace plots into private sanctuaries, whether you're overlooking the transmitter or tucked away near Anerley station.
Modern panel systems adapt brilliantly to SE19's terrain. Stepped installations follow the natural contours down towards Penge, while gravel boards protect against the clay soil's seasonal movement. Each panel locks into concrete posts rated for our infamous hilltop winds. The beauty lies in the simplicity - no gaps for nosy neighbours, no maintenance headaches, just solid boundaries that respect both your space and theirs.
Twenty years of navigating Crystal Palace's narrow Victorian alleyways has taught us every trick. Local knowledge matters when you're threading six-foot panels through a terrace's side return or working around those magnificent London plane trees that define our streets.




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Most SE20 properties see costs between £65-£95 per linear metre installed. Corner plots near the triangle often run higher due to the extra length, while compact Anerley terraces typically fall at the lower end. Slopes add 10-15% for the additional groundwork.
Absolutely - from the heights of SE19 near the dinosaurs right down to SE20's borders with Beckenham. Regular projects stretch from Upper Norwood's leafy avenues to Penge's residential streets, including those tricky properties backing onto the railway lines.
Standard Victorian terrace boundaries take 1-2 days, weather permitting. Larger Edwardian properties around Auckland Road might need 3-4 days, especially with those characteristic elevation changes. Winter installations occasionally stretch longer when dealing with waterlogged clay.
Every installation carries decade-long protection against defects - that's posts, panels, and workmanship covered until 2034. The concrete posts we use exceed British Standards for wind resistance, crucial given Crystal Palace's exposed position 112 metres above sea level.
Stepped panel arrangements handle even Church Road's dramatic inclines beautifully. Rather than following the slope (which creates awkward gaps), panels remain level while posts adjust to the gradient. The result looks crisp and intentional, maximising privacy despite the challenging topography.
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