Tree matters…
As I mentioned in my last post, as one of my very first actions I feel that I need to talk to my arboriculturalist. I think that many subsequent decisions depend on his answers.
My small plot (20m x 20m) has a chesntnut tree on its border and its roots are to be preserved. Those roots spread under about half my plot. And it is the half between my access gate and where the dwelling will be so exactly in the wrong place. Everything will travel across the roots. And the root zone is almost also the only location on the plot where I can stoer things during the build (other than inside the dwelling of course).
I have a whole host of questions for my tree guy,
- I have a couple of possible routes across the plot for the drains and services. Which is the better one for the trees?
- When it comes to the build, how can I arrange storage on site without damaging any tree roots? For example, the plot has an existing area of old block driveway right in front of the gate and over the roots. Should I keep it and use it for storage during the build? Or lift it out and put some other root-protection surface down instead?
- Should I take any root-friendly precautions when I clear the plot?
- I am having screw-pile foundations but how deep can I scrape and level the plot, particularly as I have about 40 cm of height difference across the plot (lumps and bumps, not a consistent gradient).
- When to clear the vegetation (otherwise known as “the jungle” from the plot)? Any precautions to take? How to stop weeds regrowing.
- There are quite few derelict low-level brick and concrete structures on the plot, mainly consisting of the foundations for long-since-gone greenhouse? Should I just rip everything out, or should be concerned about tree roots in doing so?
- In particular there is an old concrete water tank sunk deep into the ground (like a water butt from the ‘50s, about 1 meter square, open to the sky). It has what seems to be a land drain running into it. What to do with that?
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