Fencing in Newton-le-Willows
Fence installers for gardens: fencing supplied and fitted, from single panels to full perimeters, straight and solid the first time. Around five miles from our Leigh base.
Fencing for Newton-le-Willows Gardens
New estates and fencing go together. Developers typically fence one or two boundaries and leave the rest open, so one of the first jobs on a new plot in Newton-le-Willows is finishing the perimeter: matching panels, a gate that actually locks, and something solid enough to keep a dog in. We also upgrade the lightweight fencing developers do fit, which rarely survives many winters.
We cover Newton-le-Willows and the surrounding area: Earlestown, Wargrave, Vulcan Village, Newton in Makerfield, Tayleur Leas and beyond (WA12).
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What’s Included
Around the older parts of town the work is different, replacing tired runs behind the terraces in Earlestown and between the semis in Wargrave, usually onto concrete posts and gravel boards so the next storm bounces off. Some estates on the edge of town back onto open fields, and fences there take the wind full-on, so we build for exposure rather than just for looks.
- 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 Newton-le-Willows, FAQs
Yes, developers usually fence only the boundaries they have to, so finishing the perimeter is a standard first job on a new plot. We can match the estate fencing so the garden reads as one, or upgrade to concrete posts and gravel boards if you’d rather never do it twice.
Vulcan Village is a conservation area, so changes to boundaries visible from the street can need consent from St Helens Borough Council on top of the usual rules, up to 2 metres in a back garden, 1 metre next to a highway. We’ll help you check before anything goes in the ground.
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.
Yes. Removal and disposal of the old fencing is included in the quote. We take all waste away and leave the garden tidy.