Development plan - preservation of shrubs - comprehension question

  • Erstellt am 2021-01-09 20:49:53

Wolkensieben

2021-01-10 00:29:59
  • #1
I could never imagine how a house with a garage would fit on a plot and there would still be space for your things in the garden. But that’s deceptive. Go to a new development area and look at undeveloped building plots and then the new houses next to them, to see how much actually fits and how much space there still is. If you could keep the little trees and wouldn’t have to plant new ones, that would even be lucky. Newly planted greenery, at least in my garden, is often nibbled on by voles. If you’re unlucky with mole crickets: they aren’t any better. Better to have something old; they’ll break their teeth on that.
 

SaschaL

2021-01-10 01:17:13
  • #2
Here is a sketch.... and now consider that the bushes are about 6 meters high (shade casting?)... where it is at the top of the picture is actually south (not exact, but roughly correct)... planned as an example with a house 9.60 x 12.00 and carport 5.80 x 7.00...

The question is how far they can be cut back... it is wild and not a straight row of plants - there are plants further forward and further back in the 8-meter planting area.

According to the development plan, replacing them is not allowed... instead, in that area they must "be preserved and ADDITIONALLY be planted".
 

SaschaL

2021-01-10 01:29:16
  • #3
Addendum: I know it doesn't look like 8 meters in the pictures - but it is... I was there. And that's also what the appraisal for the development plan states.

And another addendum from the appraisal of the tree stock:

"On the southern edge of the property, a strip about 8 m wide and approximately 10 m high with shrub-like structures borders the property. It serves as a boundary to the open landscape. The strip consists of the following tree species: Robinia (Robinia pseudoacacia) Box elder (Acer negundo), common ash (Fraxinus excelsior) Birch (Betula), sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) The total length of the double-row planting is 120 m."

I even underestimated that... the thicket is up to 10 meters high! :oops:
 

ypg

2021-01-10 02:26:35
  • #4

If it borders, then it is not on the property, but adjacent... measure the property length tomorrow.
By the way, there are great trees there :)
 

Nussbaum

2021-01-10 06:29:57
  • #5
I would assume that even hardware store plants have been transplanted twice. That is actually common practice with "potted plants".
 

Nussbaum

2021-01-10 06:34:33
  • #6
It says "borders... off". So delimiting and not adjacent.
 

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