13, Newlands Close, RH6 8JR
Property data
- Sale history
-
£117,000 on Nov 1996
- Bedrooms
- 5
- Type
- Detached
- Council tax band
- F
- Plot size
- 400 square metres (4,306 square feet) - map showing freehold boundary lines
Planning applications
- Planning ref:
- November 2023 23/01988/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application approved with conditions
- Address:
- 13 Newlands Close Horley Surre
- Description:
- T1 Oak- Reduce side of Oak tree growing towards 15 Newlands Close by 1.5m back to suitable growth points. Tree is slightly one sided. Reduction of this section will re-balance crown and increase light to 15 Newlands Close.
- Planning ref:
- August 2022 22/00118/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Status not known
- Address:
- 13 Newlands Close Horley Surrey
- Description:
- T1 - Oak (T1 of TPO 260) - Reduce overall height by 2.5-3 meters & shape lateral spread by 3 meters, remove overlong low limb toward neighbouring property. T2 - Willow - Pollard approximately 1 meter above original knuckle - split and partially fallen (already undertaken as exempt tree works) T3 - Ash - Cut back 2-3 obvious lateral limbs towards house to ensure 2.5 meters clearance from house G1 - Leyland Cypress x 4 - Reduce overall height by approximately 3-4 meters G2 - Mixed species - Cut to ensure 1 meters clearance for fibre optic cabling, prune lower growth for drive way clearance
- Planning ref:
- January 2020 19/02274/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works ; this application involves multiple dwellings
- Status:
- Status not known
- Address:
- 13 Newlands Close Horley Surrey
- Description:
- Works to tree with a Tree Preservation Order (2009/9) - Oak (T11). Removal lower excessive growth, prune and tidy tree (T29 in survey report).
- Planning ref:
- December 2017 17/02588/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application approved with conditions
- Address:
- 13 Newlands Close Horley Surrey
- Description:
- T2- Oak- Remove regrowth from previously reduce overhanging branches over 11 kiln lane. Excessive shading was previously caused by tree and removal will prevent future shading.