By David Saxberg.
Steven Bailie has been in Canberra for the last 10 years and he poses the question: Why aren’t there any front fences in Canberra?
He wanted to know what was classed as a fence by the ACT Government.
“People do things to create fences… it’s a really grey line,” Steven said.
Finding the rule confusing, he jokingly asked, “Is there an officer of fences in Canberra?”
I went in search of the answer for Curious Canberra and this is what I found.
Decision dates back to 1924
The ban on front fences began in 1924 and grew out of a design debate, according to Professor Nicholas Brown, a historian at the Australian National University (ANU).
“The argument essentially came out of a move from (Walter) Burley Griffin’s concept of a really dense form of development for Canberra to Sir John Sulman, who really took over the planning of Canberra,” he said.
“Sulman was an advocate of what was called a garden city idea, which was that every house should be a sort of self-contained cottage on its own block that would encourage people to be good citizens.”
In Sulman’s Canberra, front fences didn’t have a place.
“The concern was if you allowed front fences you couldn’t find out what people were doing behind them. And that people might make the distinction between the beautiful city that they were supposed to be part of and their own little patch of ground in which they would go wild,” he said.