The Sydney Morning Herald logo
The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This hedge was their pride and joy. Then came the council email to ‘butcher’ it

Rachael Ward

Butchered, dishevelled, dead.

That’s how Phil Portellos describes the once-prized hedge outside his Prahran home after Stonnington Council ordered it be cut back over concerns it blocked the footpath.

Prahran resident Phil Portellos and his dog Bandito in front of a decades-old hedge Stonnington Council ordered to be cut back over concerns it was encroaching on the footpath.Joe Armao

“It’s very ugly,” Portellos said. “This is a hedge that’s existed for 30-odd years; it’s grown to this, it’s maintained monthly, it’s always kept pretty well.”

Portellos said the striking Cypress hedge was a significant part of why he and many neighbours moved into the apartment block, so they were surprised to learn of a complaint saying it encroached on the footpath late last year.

Advertisement

He said gardeners tended to the hedge regularly, but owners eventually had to fork out $2000 for it to be cut back to the property line by about 20 to 30 centimetres on Thursday morning.

“I thought it might be a little more dense and provide a bit more privacy,” he said. “This is a lot worse than what we were expecting.

“When the arborists attended they were not sure why the work was required. They were complimenting the shape of the hedge.”

In an email to residents obtained by this masthead, a council officer said the hedge created an obstruction on public land and extended up to 40 centimetres into the pedestrian zone outside the property.

Advertisement

“It is evident that the hedge has been mismanaged over a long period and now encroaches substantially onto council’s footpath,” the officer said.

“Council has a legal obligation to ensure the footpath remains safe, accessible, and fit for purpose.”

Councils are obligated to ensure public footpaths are accessible to everyone under the Disability Discrimination Act. It is understood complaints to Stonnington related to footpath safety and accessibility, particularly on bin days.

The property is located off busy Punt Road, and Portellos fears that even though the building has CCTV, residents’ privacy and security could be compromised as passers-by can now peer into their homes.

Advertisement

He said there was no guarantee the hedge would grow back, so residents were calling on the council to chip in to cover the cost of removing and replacing it if its leaves did not return.

“It’s probably going to be thousands of dollars that we’re going to be out of pocket, so at least some sort of contribution from them is something that we would like to see,” he said.

“We’re all pretty furious. Every single one of the owner-occupiers who are either living here or rent it out, no one really wanted to go through with this.”

In a statement, a Stonnington Council spokesperson said the owners’ corporation managed the gardening contractor, who undertook the works after being issued a notice to comply from the council.

Advertisement

“Council was not responsible for the hedge trimming work undertaken at the property on the corner of Greville Street and Punt Road, Prahran,” the spokesperson said.

Portellos questioned whether the council also planned to address any hazard posed by trees embedded in footpaths.

“They should look at a lot of these older paper bark trees and how far they are now encroaching onto a lot of the areas in the footpath,” he said.

Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

Rachael WardRachael Ward is a journalist in the City team at The Age. Contact her at rachael.ward@theage.com.auConnect via email.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement