18, Vicarage Road, SW14 8RU
Property data
- Sale history
-
£256,000 on May 1996
- Bedrooms
- 4
- Type
- Detached
- Council tax band
- G
- Plot size
- 487 square metres (5,242 square feet) - map showing freehold boundary lines
Planning applications
- Planning ref:
- October 2024 24/T0731/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Status not known
- Address:
- 18 Vicarage Road East Sheen London
- Description:
- FRONT GARDEN T1 Horse Chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum) Reduce crown to the most recent previous reduction points, removing approx. 2m of new growth, retaining some furnishing growth. Final height 10m and final overall spread 8m.
- Planning ref:
- January 2024 24/T0014/TCA
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Status not known
- Address:
- 18 Vicarage Road East Sheen London
- Description:
- See Image TW2024 and Planning Application TW2024 documents
- Planning ref:
- January 2024 23/T0923/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application refused
- Address:
- 18 Vicarage Road East Sheen Londo
- Description:
- T1 as shown on sketch plan - Horse Chestnut - report attached T2 as shown on sketch plan - London Plane - report attached
- Planning ref:
- December 2014 14/T0967/TPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application refused
- Address:
- 18 Vicarage Road East Sheen London
- Description:
- A passer-by alerted me this morning to the fact that there are very large cracks in the wall in front of our garden (ie adjoining the a pavement) caused by the tree that abuts it. Although the tree (horse-chestnut) is diseased and is virtually devoid of leaves, it is still alive, and therefore presumably continuing to grow The wall is required to retain the earth around the tree, as the level is higher than the pavement outside, but there does not seem to be a way of keeping the wall and the tree if the tree is pushing the wall over (the wall is right on the boundary). Obviously my concern is the risk (pointed out to me by the neighbour) that the wall could collapse and injure a pedestrian or pet, and/or cause debris that would cause someone infirm, or with impaired eyesight to trip. The tree has a TPO on it, so I urgently sought advice from the tree department who emailed me back telling me to raise an application online to remove it. I am concerned that in the meantime it poses a potential danger, and so would appreciate this being given urgent attention.