ypg
2025-10-25 12:08:14
- #1
Congratulations!
I would first inquire about what is actually allowed. Later in planning comes what must be done. Or rather, how can the preservation of the trees be combined with new construction. You won’t be the first to have to build around trees, see .
Brush can stay until the first groundbreaking. If you want to see what the soil looks like beforehand, then invest the first two savings installments in the property. In the other thread I see a grass driveway. That will become the construction road, the foundation for later.
Is the development regulated? Give us some information, otherwise it will become confusing.
The trees (two beeches about 30m tall) are actually still worrying us. The crowns definitely need to be removed, but probably the whole tree as well. That will not only be expensive but also something that might become urgent. Here, you are only allowed to work on the tree until the end of March.
I would first inquire about what is actually allowed. Later in planning comes what must be done. Or rather, how can the preservation of the trees be combined with new construction. You won’t be the first to have to build around trees, see .
Brush can stay until the first groundbreaking. If you want to see what the soil looks like beforehand, then invest the first two savings installments in the property. In the other thread I see a grass driveway. That will become the construction road, the foundation for later.
Is the development regulated? Give us some information, otherwise it will become confusing.