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Root protection cordons.


samwise
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A root protection area (RPA) as described by BS5837:2005 is 12 times the diameter of the stem at a height of 1.5m. (or 10 times the diameter just above the basal flare of a multistemmed tree).

 

Similar guidance is offered by NJUG Vol 4 guidelines. Which breaks the root area into zones.

 

I've attached the NJUG guidelines below - they're freely available to download from the NJUG website. The British Standard on the other hand, is a different matter.

 

Has the RPA/zoning been specified for planning reasons or utility work???

NJUG VOL 4.pdf

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More 11 times than 10 if we get our BS5837 head on, and nothing can go inside that zone, a great big barrier should be put up, no building materials can be deposited on roots inside, no waste materials can be emtied inside, it is an exclusion zone for a reason. Depending on the location of the tree you can slew the RPA by 20%, however you need to look at how the tree has grown, ie in an open area where its roots will probably just fanout in all directions, or in a wooded area where there are lighting issues and dominance issues.

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More 11 times than 10 if we get our BS5837 head on, and nothing can go inside that zone, a great big barrier should be put up, no building materials can be deposited on roots inside, no waste materials can be emtied inside, it is an exclusion zone for a reason. Depending on the location of the tree you can slew the RPA by 20%, however you need to look at how the tree has grown, ie in an open area where its roots will probably just fanout in all directions, or in a wooded area where there are lighting issues and dominance issues.

 

11? Where'd you get that from??? :confused1:

 

You right that you may offset the RPA of an open grown tree by up to 20% in accordance with BS5837:2005 but there is no provision for offsetting a NJUG zone. That's because one is a planning tool and the other a mitigation guideline.

 

I interpret 'open' as meaning there was nothing to impede the growth of the tree above or below ground. That includes other trees!

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