Fencing in Golborne
Fence installers for gardens: fencing supplied and fitted, from single panels to full perimeters, straight and solid the first time. Around four miles from our Leigh base.
Fencing for Golborne Gardens
Golborne fencing jobs come in every size, a single blown panel down a terraced back alley, a full new run between semis, or a long boundary out where the town meets open farmland on the Kenyon side. Those edge-of-town plots catch real wind, so we build for it: concrete posts, gravel boards and panels fixed to stay fixed.
We cover Golborne and the surrounding area: Bank Heath, Park Road, Stone Cross, Lowton, Lowton Common and beyond (WA3).
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What’s Included
Being four miles away in Leigh means Golborne repairs get sorted fast, storm damage especially, where an open boundary with a dog or young kids can’t wait a fortnight. For full replacements we clear the old fence, cart it away and leave a straight, solid line that’ll outlast its neighbours.
- Close-board, panel and picket fencing
- Concrete or timber posts, set properly
- Gravel boards to stop rot at ground level
- Garden gates made to match
- Old fencing removed and disposed of
- Storm damage fence repairs and panel swaps
How It Works
Fencing in Golborne, FAQs
The usual rule applies: up to 2 metres in a back garden without planning permission, but only 1 metre where the fence fronts a highway. Corner plots and driveway boundaries can be caught by that. If yours is borderline we’ll check with Wigan Council’s rules before we build.
Yes, small repairs are worth doing properly and we don’t turn them away. Golborne is close enough to Leigh that a couple of panels slot easily into the week, often alongside another local job.
Most domestic fencing jobs take one to two days. A single 6ft panel or post swap is usually done in a morning; a full garden perimeter with old fence removal might run to two or three days.
Concrete posts last decades and never rot, but timber looks softer and costs less up front. In exposed gardens we usually recommend concrete posts with gravel boards, because that combination survives the wettest winters.