(855) 598-3288 — Beaverton's 24/7 Fence Company
Open 24/7 Beaverton, OR & Washington County Licensed & Insured (855) 598-3288
fence company south beaverton in a newer planned subdivision near progress ridge
South Beaverton, OR · ZIPs 97007 / 97008

Fence Company in South Beaverton

Fencing across South Beaverton's newer subdivisions and condos near Progress Ridge TownSquare — the styles HOA review approves, plus the pool-fence code and height rules that apply before you build.

Newer Planned Subdivisions Licensed & Insured Open 24/7
South Beaverton Overview

A Fence Company Serving South Beaverton

South Beaverton is the city's newer, walkable south end — planned subdivisions and condos built largely from the early 2000s on, clustered around the restaurants, shops, and theater of Progress Ridge TownSquare. It is a recognized Beaverton Neighborhood Association Committee spanning ZIPs 97007 and 97008, near Scholls Ferry Road and the Mountainside High School area. Beaverton Fence Pro covers this whole area, from an HOA-approved privacy run on a subdivision lot to a code-compliant pool fence on a newer property.

We are a service-area company. We come to your property, build for the wet Pacific Northwest climate, and keep your fence within city code and your HOA's rules. There is no showroom and no published address — just a crew that shows up where the work is. Homeowners across the subdivisions and retail tenants around Progress Ridge both call the same number. When you are ready for numbers, the fencing in South Beaverton page covers the transactional side. Otherwise, read on, and call (855) 598-3288 any time, day or night.

What South Beaverton Covers

South Beaverton spans ZIPs 97007 and 97008 across the city's south end. Its housing skews newer than most of Beaverton — planned subdivisions, townhomes, and condos built largely from the early 2000s onward, designed for walkability with sidewalks, paths, and pocket parks woven through. The area is a recognized Beaverton Neighborhood Association Committee, and children here feed into the Beaverton School District, with the Mountainside High School area a recognizable local anchor.

The neighborhood's gravity center is Progress Ridge TownSquare, a lifestyle center with restaurants, shops, a movie theater, and lake and walking paths that draws the whole south end. Most of the surrounding homes were master-planned, which means uniform lots, common-area greenbelts, and — crucially for fencing — a strong HOA and CC&R presence that governs height, material, and color. The terrain is planned-subdivision grading, mostly engineered flat, though some sections slope toward the south hills. South Beaverton borders Murray Hill and Sexton Mountain. The defining fact for fencing is the governance: in most of South Beaverton, your HOA has as much say over your fence as the city does. That is exactly why a fence overview matters here. If you are not sure what your community allows, give us your cross streets and we will sort it out.

HOA & CC&R Review in South Beaverton

If you own a home in South Beaverton, your fence almost certainly answers to a homeowners association as well as the city — and the HOA usually has the stricter say. The master-planned developments here lean heavily on architectural review, and the committees commonly dictate the allowed height, material, and color. Many require a specific style or a uniform stain so the neighborhood reads as one cohesive whole, some restrict or ban certain materials outright, and a number have particular rules for fences that face a common-area greenbelt or a shared path. Approval has to come before the fence goes up, not after.

That review step is where South Beaverton homeowners get caught most often. Building first and seeking approval later can mean tearing out a non-conforming fence at your own expense, so the smart move is always to confirm the CC&Rs before any post goes in the ground. We are familiar with how these south-end subdivision reviews work and build to the exact spec a committee requires — the right height, the approved material, the correct color or stain, and the proper treatment where a lot backs onto a greenbelt. We confirm what governs your specific lot during the estimate, so the fence we build clears architectural review the first time rather than becoming an expensive do-over.

Fence Styles for South Beaverton Homes

The fence that fits depends on what your subdivision allows. Across South Beaverton's planned developments, cedar privacy fence and vinyl / PVC fence installation are the dominant choices, because they hold the clean, uniform line that HOA review tends to approve — vinyl for its no-upkeep finish, cedar for its natural rot resistance in the wet climate. Many communities effectively standardize on one look, so matching the neighborhood is part of the job.

For a more current style, horizontal fence installation brings clean modern slat lines that suit the newer architecture where the HOA permits it, and aluminum or ornamental panels handle front sections, corners, and common-area edges where an open look reads better. A frequent South Beaverton request is a pool fence installation — newer homes with pools need a barrier that meets safety code, with self-closing, self-latching gates and the right height and spacing to keep children out. Whatever the style, the install quality matters more than the label: posts set deep in concrete with drainage resist the heave that comes when the ground swells in winter. A fence set right will outlast a "premium" fence dropped shallow in bare dirt, every time. We plan the build, and the HOA spec, during the on-site estimate.

Fence Height & Pool-Fence Rules in South Beaverton

City fence rules come from the Beaverton Development Code and read the same across South Beaverton as they do citywide. The basics:

  • Side & rear yards: a fence can generally reach 6 feet tall without a building permit.
  • Front & street-facing yards: the limit drops to about 3.5 feet (42 inches) to keep the streetscape open.
  • Corner lots & driveways: height is restricted inside the vision-clearance triangle near intersections and driveway approaches.
  • Pool fences: a pool barrier must meet safety code — sufficient height, limited gaps, and a self-closing, self-latching gate.

In most of South Beaverton, the HOA rules sit on top of these city limits and are frequently tighter, so a fence has to satisfy both. Pool fencing is the one area where the safety code is non-negotiable regardless of the HOA, and we build to it. Heights are measured from finished grade, worth confirming on graded subdivision lots and the sections that slope toward the south hills. We confirm the city code, the pool-fence requirements, and any HOA spec for your specific lot during the estimate so the approved plan is the one that goes in the ground.

Commercial & Progress Ridge Coverage

South Beaverton is not all subdivision yards. Progress Ridge TownSquare anchors the south end with restaurants, shops, a theater, and surrounding office and service space — and those businesses fence for different reasons than homeowners do. A retailer or service tenant near Progress Ridge may want a security-minded boundary, a screened enclosure for a dumpster or equipment area, or a controlled gate that defines the lot. We handle that commercial & security fencing work alongside the residential jobs, on the same 24/7 line.

The TownSquare and its lake and paths sit on managed land we do not fence, but the residential and small-commercial properties around it are exactly what we work on. We cover the homes and businesses near fencing near Progress Ridge TownSquare every week, from a subdivision privacy run a few blocks off the center to a screening fence for a service business along the corridor. If your property sits near Progress Ridge, you are squarely inside our core South Beaverton service area.

code-compliant pool fence on a newer South Beaverton home
Inside South Beaverton

Landmark & Areas We Cover

The South Beaverton spots and neighbors we work near every day.

Fencing That Fits a Master-Planned South End

There is a practical pattern to how South Beaverton yards get fenced, and it runs through the HOA. The typical job is a clean privacy run in an approved material and color, matched to the neighborhood and cleared through architectural review — uniform, conforming, built to fit a master-planned street. Pool fences are a steady second, since many newer homes have pools that need a code-compliant barrier. Front sections everywhere stay low and open for the 3.5-foot limit, and fences facing common-area greenbelts follow the community's particular rules for those edges.

The Pacific Northwest climate sets the build standard no matter the style. Wet winters keep the ground saturated, so footings have to be deep and well-drained, and rot-resistant cedar or low-upkeep vinyl is the material of choice for anyone who wants a fence to last. The graded subdivision lots are mostly flat, but the sections sloping toward the south hills need the run stepped cleanly down the grade. We have built fences across these planned communities long enough to know how the reviews work and how to set a line that holds. Explore the full menu of our fencing services, or look across the city through the all Beaverton neighborhoods overview to see how South Beaverton fits the wider map.

Quick Answers

South Beaverton Fencing FAQs

Straight answers — no clicking around.

What fence color and style will my HOA approve?
Each South Beaverton community sets its own rules, but most require a specific height, material, and color or stain so the neighborhood stays uniform. We review your CC&Rs before building and construct to that exact spec, so the fence clears architectural review on the first pass instead of being torn out later.
Do I need a permit for a fence in a planned subdivision?
A standard fence within the usual limits — 6 feet in side and rear yards, about 3.5 feet street-facing — generally does not need a city building permit, but your HOA almost certainly requires its own approval first. We handle building to both the city code and the HOA spec.
Can you install a pool fence that meets code?
Yes. We build pool fences to safety code — adequate height, limited gaps that a child cannot slip through, and a self-closing, self-latching gate. Many newer South Beaverton homes have pools, and a compliant barrier is one of our regular jobs here.

Fencing for Your South Beaverton Property

South-end coverage, HOA-aware builds, free on-site estimates. We answer 24/7.

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