D Dylan said:
We can build completely solid up to 1.1m, but don't know if it affects visibility in any way? Maybe for too curious children :D
The combination of solid and trellis, I think, gives a higher sense of separation than just a trellis at the same height. Then my childhood home didn't even have a solid trellis, and we don't have as high as 1.1m on the solid part. It may mostly be psychological, but perceiving the plot as private vs public is what I perceive as the problem now. The easiest way is to put up some boards, pieces of cardboard, or the like at the right height and look at it from both sides.
 
If you place the boards vertically and "crosswise" you can achieve up to 80-90% air while still having a visually closed fence, as you can only see through directly sideways, if you look at an angle it is tight.
 
Z z_bumbi said:
I think the combination of dense and trellis gives a greater sense of separation than just trellis at the same height. My parents' home doesn't even have a dense trellis and we don't have as high as 1.1 on the dense part. It might mostly be psychological, but perceiving the plot as private vs public is what I perceive as the problem now. The simplest solution is to put up some boards, pieces of cardboard, or similar at the right height and view it from both sides.
Yes, you're probably right, see if I can sketch something and think about how it might turn out :)
 
Anna_H Anna_H said:
If you place planks vertically and "across," you can get up to 80-90% air, but still have a visually closed fence, because you can only see through straight to the side; from an angle, it's tight.
That's a good idea! But according to the response above, it's not allowed because it's perceived as tight?
 
D Dylan said:
That's a good idea! But according to the answer above, it is not allowed as it is perceived as dense?
It only seems dense if you look at it sideways. If you look straight, it feels airy.
 
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