
Fencing across Triple Creek's newer west-side subdivisions and greenway lots — the styles HOA review approves, plus the setbacks, drainage, and height rules that hold a fence near the creek corridors.
Triple Creek is a newer west-side neighborhood of planned subdivisions and townhomes, named for the creek corridors that thread through it. Paired with Five Oaks as the Five Oaks / Triple Creek NAC — the two have run joint cleanups and plantings for decades — it sits in ZIP 97006 among Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District greenways. Beaverton Fence Pro covers this whole area, from a clean privacy run on a builder lot to a careful line along a greenway-adjacent backyard.
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 HOA communities near the greenways both call the same number. When you are ready for numbers, the fencing in Triple Creek page covers the transactional side. Otherwise, read on, and call (855) 598-3288 any time, day or night.
Triple Creek sits in ZIP 97006 on the west side of Beaverton, a neighborhood built largely from newer planned subdivisions and townhome developments. Its name comes from the creek and greenway corridors that run through the area, and those waterways shape both its green character and its fencing. Children here feed into the Beaverton School District, and THPRD greenway trails wind between the developments, giving the neighborhood a parklike feel uncommon for newer construction.
As the smaller half of the Five Oaks / Triple Creek NAC, Triple Creek is closely tied to Five Oaks next door — the two neighborhoods have collaborated on greenway cleanups and plantings for years, and they share borders and a recognized association. Triple Creek also borders West Beaverton. The terrain is newer-subdivision grading, engineered for drainage, but the creek corridors mean a good number of lots back onto a greenway or a damp buffer where the ground stays wet. The defining fact for fencing is the combination of HOA governance and creek-adjacent lots: most homes answer to an architectural review committee, and a meaningful share also sit near a protected waterway with its own setback rules. That mix is exactly why a fence overview matters here. If you are not sure how your lot sits relative to the greenways, give us your cross streets and we will sort it out.
The fence that fits depends on what your subdivision allows and where your lot sits. Across Triple Creek'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 require — 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 work.
For homeowners who want a more current style, horizontal fence installation gives clean modern slat lines that read well against the greenway backdrop, where the HOA permits it. Traditional wood fits where an older or transitional development allows it, and chain-link stays the budget choice for back lots and dog runs, sometimes screened with slats. Aluminum or ornamental panels handle front sections and corners where the lower height limit applies. Whatever the style, the install quality matters more than the label, and on greenway-adjacent lots that is doubly true: damp, creek-fed ground rots and heaves an undersized post, so footings have to be deep, concrete-set, and well-drained. A fence set right will outlast a "premium" fence dropped shallow in wet dirt, every time. We plan that build, and any greenway setback, during the on-site estimate.
Most Triple Creek homes sit inside a planned subdivision with an active homeowners association, and that association usually has the final say on your fence. Architectural review committees here commonly dictate the allowed height, material, and color — many require a specific style or a uniform stain so the neighborhood reads as one, and some restrict or ban certain materials. Approval has to come before the fence goes up, not after.
That step is where homeowners get caught. Building first and seeking approval later can mean tearing out a non-conforming fence at your own cost, so the smart move is to confirm the CC&Rs before any post goes in the ground. We are familiar with how these west-side subdivision reviews tend to work and can build to the exact spec your committee requires — the right height, the approved material, the correct color or stain. Where a community has a designated style for greenway-facing lots, we match it. We confirm what governs your specific lot during the estimate so the fence we build clears review the first time.
The creek corridors that give Triple Creek its name also give some lots a special set of rules. A backyard that ends at a greenway, a creek buffer, or a THPRD trail often carries a setback from the protected edge, meaning the fence cannot simply run to the property line. Those buffers exist to protect the waterway, and building into one can mean a forced tear-out. We confirm the boundary and any setback at the estimate, then place the line where it is both compliant and as private as the rules allow.
Drainage is the other half of the equation. Creek-adjacent ground stays damp, and newer-subdivision grading was designed to move water — which means understanding where the water goes before setting a post. We use concrete footings with proper drainage so the wet does not rot or heave the posts on these saturated lots, and we choose rot-resistant materials like cedar or vinyl that hold up to constant moisture. The result is a fence that respects the greenway, satisfies the HOA, and still stands plumb after a decade of Beaverton winters. We lay all of that out during the on-site estimate so there are no surprises once the digging starts.

City fence rules come from the Beaverton Development Code and read the same across Triple Creek as they do citywide. The basics:
In Triple Creek, remember that the HOA rules sit on top of these city limits and are frequently tighter, and that greenway-adjacent lots can carry an extra setback. The planned street layouts put many homes on corner lots and along curves, so the vision-clearance triangle comes up often. Heights are measured from finished grade. We confirm the city code, the HOA spec, and any creek setback for your specific lot during the estimate so the approved plan is the one that goes in the ground.
Triple Creek sits among a cluster of west-side neighborhoods we work every day.
The paired half of the same NAC, just to the north.
fencing in Five OaksThe broad west-side neighbor with a similar subdivision mix.
fencing in West BeavertonReady for numbers? See the transactional Triple Creek page.
fencing in Triple CreekThere is a practical pattern to how Triple Creek yards get fenced. In the interior of a subdivision, the work is usually a clean privacy run in an HOA-approved material and color — uniform, conforming, and matched to the neighborhood. On greenway-facing lots, the work adds a setback and drainage layer: a line placed to respect the creek buffer, set on footings built for damp ground. Front sections everywhere stay low and open for the 3.5-foot limit, and pet owners often pair a privacy back fence with a lower side run for visibility.
The Pacific Northwest climate sets the build standard, and the creek corridors raise it on the lots that border them. Wet winters and creek-fed ground keep the soil saturated, so footings have to be deep and well-drained, and rot-resistant cedar or vinyl is the material of choice for anyone who wants a fence to last near water. We have built and rebuilt fences across these west-side subdivisions and along their greenways long enough to know how the water moves 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 Triple Creek fits the wider map.
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