- La Verne Online – La Verne, CA News, Local, Features, Sports, Real Estate, Coupons, Business, Entertainment, and More! - http://www.laverneonline.com -

THE REAL DIRTT: Going Horizontal

“Love your neighbor; yet don’t pull down your hedge.”

Benjamin Franklin

If you’ve driven through northeast Los Angeles lately, you’ll notice that horizontal fences are now all the rage. But the trend isn’t exactly new.

Indeed, until about 40 years most fences were horizontal. They only started standing upright in response to new safety codes and ordinances that required fences to be 42-inches high so they would be made more difficult to climb, especially around swimming areas.

But with land at a premium, horizontal fences also create an optical illusion, fooling you to think your yard is more expansive than it actually is, hence the explosion of horizontal fences in land-challenged, more urbanized areas of the Southland like Silver Lake and Highland Park.

Horizontal fences also seem to suggest a more subtle approach to fencing your neighbors out. It’s a softer perimeter. Depending on the gaps between the slats, you can still peek at your neighbors and, yes, they can still peek at you.

Some fencing experts believe the current surge in horizontal fencing takes its inspiration from California’s multiple wine regions, where sprawling wine estates and easy living are associated with their horizontal fencing.

Whatever your reason or inspiration for going horizontal, whether you build the fence yourself or hire a contractor, here are a few things to consider:

Don’t start digging the holes for your posts until you call 811. A utility company will come out and let you know if you’re about to dig into a pipe or power line.

Horizontal fences are back in vogue. What’s important is not whether you are setting the trend or following it, but simply whether you like the way they look and make you feel.