
Black vinyl-coated chain link fence surrounding a residential playground — Maple Ridge, BC.
Fencing in Maple Ridge — Materials, Bylaws & Costs (1970 Guide)
Everything you need to know about fencing in Maple Ridge, BC — bylaw heights, best materials for our climate, typical costs, and how a working Maple Ridge fence contractor actually builds it.
Fencing in Maple Ridge sits at the intersection of metro vancouver weather, tight municipal setback rules, and lots that range from maple ridge runs from flat river-plain along the fraser up to steep, treed acreage in silver valley, yennadon, and the golden ears foothills. We've been installing chain link, cedar, ornamental steel, and custom gates across Maple Ridge and the surrounding Fraser Valley for over a decade — this guide is a straight rundown of what actually works on the ground here, what the bylaw allows, and what a typical project looks like from quote to backfill.
Whether you're a homeowner in Silver Valley planning a backyard privacy fence, a property manager securing a strata perimeter, or a contractor lining up sub-trades on a Maple Ridge commercial build, the same three things decide whether a fence lasts: post depth, post material, and how it's tied back to your specific soil and grade. That's what we'll cover.
Maple Ridge is one of our home markets. Between the log yards, working farms, hillside acreages, and steady stream of Silver Valley new-builds, we've probably installed more linear feet of fence in Maple Ridge than any single city outside Chilliwack and Abbotsford. The mix here is unusual — a Silver Valley homeowner wanting a horizontal-slat modern cedar fence in the morning, an acreage owner in Whonnock needing a 600-foot perimeter of galvanized chain link with barbed wire the same afternoon. Our welding shop is set up to fabricate handrails, driveway gates, and equipment-yard cantilever gates in-house, which is often the difference between a two-week and a six-week delivery on custom metalwork.
Fencing conditions in Maple Ridge
Maple Ridge averages 1,900 mm of rain — very wet — with more snow at elevation on the Silver Valley bench and Golden Ears foothills. For a fence that means UV, moisture cycling, wind loading, and — in the winter months — freeze-thaw at ground level. Every one of those wears on a different part of the assembly.
Maple Ridge runs from flat river-plain along the Fraser up to steep, treed acreage in Silver Valley, Yennadon, and the Golden Ears foothills. That matters because the failure point of almost every fence is the post, and the post's job is to transfer wind load into the ground. Loose or shallow-sinking soil calls for deeper holes and a stiffer concrete mix; rocky or clay-heavy sites often need coring or a percussion bit rather than a standard auger.
- Post depth: minimum 30 in. for standard 6 ft residential fences, 36–42 in. for gates and any run over 6 ft.
- Concrete: crown the top so water sheds off the post rather than pooling around it.
- Fasteners: hot-dip galvanized or stainless — plain zinc-plated screws bleed rust within two winters on the coast.
- Rail spacing: three rails on any run over 5 ft, especially where wind rolls off open ground.
What we build most in Maple Ridge
The projects we bid on across Maple Ridge fall into a handful of recurring shapes: acreage chain link with barbed wire, cedar and horizontal-slat privacy on new-builds, handrails and welded gates, log-yard and equipment perimeters, and the odd custom gate or handrail welded up in our shop. Below is what each of those typically looks like for a Maple Ridge property.
Residential privacy — cedar or black chain link
The most common request. A rear-yard cedar privacy fence at 1.83 m rear/side is the default look for most Maple Ridge backyards. Black vinyl-coated chain link is a lower-cost alternative that disappears into landscaping and lasts twice as long. We frame in the gates the same day so nothing sits open overnight.
Commercial and strata perimeters
Galvanized chain link with a 9-gauge mesh, top and bottom rail, and either barbed wire or a smooth rail top depending on tenant use. Maple Ridge strata boards typically want colour-matched black; commercial yards want visibility and drive-through gates sized for a semi.
Ornamental and driveway gates
Powder-coated ornamental steel for front yards on premium Maple Ridge properties, plus custom cantilever or swing driveway gates fabricated and welded in-house. We tie into keypad, card-reader, or LTE gate operators as needed.
Rain and tree cover are the two big design constraints. Silver Valley, Yennadon, and Websters Corners all sit on lots with mature Douglas-fir and cedar cover, which means shade, moss, and constant moisture at ground level. On those lots we spec 36-inch post depth as a default, always crown the concrete tops, and are upfront that any cedar fence in that environment needs an oil or stain within the first year. On the flip side, Hammond and Albion sit on flatter, more open ground closer to the river, and standard 30-inch post depth with two-rail construction works fine. We adjust the spec based on where the property actually sits, not on a one-size-fits-all Maple Ridge template.
Permits and bylaws in Maple Ridge
Maple Ridge regulates fences under its Zoning Bylaw. Fences within standard heights don't require a permit; agricultural land, watercourse setbacks, and Wildland-Urban Interface areas may add requirements.
Practically, in Maple Ridge that means: 1.83 m rear/side, 1.2 m front. Corner lots almost always have an extra sightline triangle at the intersection where fence height drops to about 3 ft to protect visibility for drivers. Pools require their own enclosure standard under the BC Building Code regardless of what the city bylaw says.
We pull the current bylaw text from the City of Maple Ridge — Fences before every Maple Ridge quote so the fence you approve is the fence we can legally build. If you're planning something above the standard height — a security perimeter, an equipment yard screen, an acoustic fence along a busy road — a variance is usually possible but adds four to eight weeks to the timeline.
- Front yard: typically capped lower than rear yard for streetscape and sightlines.
- Corner lots: sightline triangle rules apply at intersections.
- Pool enclosures: BC Building Code Part 9 governs — self-closing, self-latching gate required.
- Retaining-wall fences: anything over 1.2 m of exposed wall generally needs an engineered permit.
Materials that hold up in Maple Ridge
Maple Ridge's wet, treed environment is tough on cedar unless finished early; the flip side is that established rural fence lines run for hundreds of feet and reward well-set galvanized chain link. We break the material choice down by where the fence lives — coastal exposure and shade both change what will actually last.
Galvanized and vinyl-coated chain link
The workhorse. Hot-dip galvanized before weaving is the spec you want — pre-galvanized wire rusts out at the cut ends within a decade in our climate. Black vinyl coating over galvanized adds another 15–20 years of corrosion protection and cuts glare, which is why it's the default on Maple Ridge residential rear yards now.
Western red cedar
Locally milled, naturally rot- and insect-resistant, and the material of choice for privacy runs. Expect 15–25 years with basic maintenance — a stain or oil every 3–5 years extends that meaningfully. Rough-sawn boards weather to silver; smooth boards take stain more evenly.
Ornamental steel
Powder-coated steel picket for front yards, entry gates, and pool enclosures. Zero maintenance, holds up structurally for decades, and gives you the security of steel without looking like a jail yard.
Pressure-treated softwood — usually not
We rarely spec pressure-treated fence boards in Maple Ridge. In our wet climate PT boards cup, twist, and check faster than cedar, and the cost gap has closed. Where we do use PT is for the posts inside concrete on cedar runs.
What fencing costs in Maple Ridge
Maple Ridge pricing is in line with the Fraser Valley average — flat lots price standard, steep or heavily treed Silver Valley acreages run 10–15% higher for the extra dig work and post depth. Ranges below reflect standard residential work in Maple Ridge at current material and labour rates — final numbers depend on access, grade, gate count, and how many corners the run turns.
- Galvanized chain link (6 ft): ~$32–$48 per linear foot installed
- Black vinyl-coated chain link (6 ft): ~$42–$60 per linear foot installed
- Cedar privacy fence (6 ft, dog-eared or flat-top): ~$55–$85 per linear foot installed
- Cedar horizontal-slat privacy fence: ~$85–$120 per linear foot installed
- Ornamental steel picket (5–6 ft): ~$85–$140 per linear foot installed
- Custom swing or cantilever driveway gate: from ~$4,500 depending on span, material, and automation
Every quote is written on-site. No pressure sales, no phone-only estimates that fall apart the moment we see the actual grade.
Neighbourhoods in Maple Ridge we work in most
We're on the road across Maple Ridge weekly. Recent and recurring jobs cluster in Silver Valley, Albion, Yennadon, Hammond, Whonnock, Downtown Maple Ridge, Websters Corners — a mix of postwar residential streets, newer strata developments, and light industrial pockets that all have their own quirks. If you're in Silver Valley or Albion, chances are one of our trucks has been on your street this month.
Because we run our own excavation kit — a Kubota mini-excavator with a percussion post-drilling attachment — we handle the tighter, rockier, or root-bound lots that other crews subcontract out. That's a meaningful difference on older Maple Ridge lots where roots and buried debris can stretch a straightforward install into a two-day dig.
How the job actually runs
Every fence we install follows the same rhythm — no surprises, no scope creep.
- Free on-site walk-through and written quote, typically within 48 hours
- Locate call to BC 1 Call before any digging (we handle it)
- Post holes dug and set with concrete, allowed 24–48 hours to cure
- Framing and mesh / boards / picket panels installed
- Gates hung, hardware set, site cleaned, final walk-through with you
A standard 100 ft residential run is usually a two-day job. Larger commercial perimeters, cantilever gates, or excavation-heavy sites get their own timeline in the written quote.
Why work with a local Maple Ridge fence contractor
A national franchise install crew shows up with one panel spec, one post size, and a subcontractor holding the auger. That model works in a subdivision where every lot is identical; it does not work on a Maple Ridge lot where the setback is tight, the neighbour's old post is buried in the wrong place, and the soil changes twice between the front and back property lines. Local matters because the person quoting your fence needs to have stood on the actual ground — read the grade, spotted the buried irrigation, confirmed the property pins — before the number goes on paper.
We're a family-run shop that has been welding gates and installing fence across Metro Vancouver since 2011. Same crew, same shop, same phone number. Every Maple Ridge quote is written by someone who will be on the job site the day the auger runs. That's the meaningful difference: continuity from quote to installation to the warranty call two years later when a hinge needs an adjustment.
- Direct dispatch — the person quoting your Maple Ridge job is the person running the crew.
- In-house welding shop — custom gates, brackets, and repairs fabricated on-site, not ordered in.
- Own excavation equipment — no waiting on a sub-trade to open post holes.
- Written, itemized quote — every line broken out so you can compare apples to apples.
- Warranty in writing — one year on labour, manufacturer coverage on materials.
Common Maple Ridge fencing mistakes we get called to fix
A meaningful share of our Maple Ridge calls are repairs — someone else built the fence three or five years ago, and the same handful of failures come up again and again. Sharing them here so you can spec around them the first time.
1. Posts set too shallow
We pull a lot of old Maple Ridge posts out of 18-inch holes. 30 inches is the minimum for a 6-ft residential fence in our climate, and 36–42 inches for gates and taller runs. A shallow post looks fine until the first winter wind rocks it loose in the freeze-thaw.
2. Wrong fasteners
Plain zinc-plated deck screws are the single most common failure we see on Maple Ridge cedar fences. They bleed rust within two winters and rot the board around the screw head. Hot-dip galvanized or stainless is the only defensible spec on the coast.
3. Ignoring drainage
A post hole that pools water becomes a rot column. Crown the concrete above grade so water sheds away from the post, and on wet Maple Ridge lots consider a drainage rock base at the bottom of the hole.
4. Building over an unsurveyed line
On older Maple Ridge blocks, the "obvious" fence line and the surveyed property line disagree more often than people expect. Building the new fence on the wrong line invites a bylaw complaint and, in the worst case, a tear-down order. When in doubt, get a survey.
Typical Maple Ridge project timeline
For most Maple Ridge homeowners the useful question is how many weeks from first call to finished fence. Below is a realistic timeline for a standard residential job in our current schedule — larger commercial perimeters or custom gate fabrication add lead time.
- Day 0 — you book a quote (phone, form, or email).
- Day 1–3 — we schedule an on-site walk-through and hand you a written quote.
- Day 4–14 — you approve; we schedule install and file the BC 1 Call locate.
- Install day 1 — post holes, posts set in concrete, cure overnight.
- Install day 2 — mesh / boards / picket panels installed, gates hung, site cleaned.
- Day of install — final walk-through, invoice, one-year workmanship warranty in writing.
In peak season (April through September) our schedule fills 3–5 weeks ahead. Booking a quote early — even before you're ready to commit — locks in the earliest install slot without any obligation.
"The best fence in Maple Ridge is the one built for your specific lot — not a catalogue install dropped on top of your grade."
Ready to talk through a specific project? Book a free on-site quote and we'll walk your Maple Ridge property together, pull the current bylaw, and price it in writing.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need a permit for a fence in Maple Ridge?
- No permit for standard-height residential fences (1.83 m rear/side, 1.2 m front). Watercourse setbacks and Wildland-Urban Interface rules may add requirements on some acreages.
- How long does a Maple Ridge acreage perimeter take to install?
- A 500-foot perimeter of 6-ft galvanized chain link with barbed wire on flat Maple Ridge acreage is typically a 3–5 day job depending on gate count and terrain. Wooded or steep sites take longer.
- Can you weld custom driveway gates for a Maple Ridge property?
- Yes. We fabricate custom swing and cantilever driveway gates in our own welding shop, install on-site, and can tie into keypad or LTE gate operators. Turnaround is typically 2–3 weeks from approved drawings.
- What material holds up best on a Silver Valley wooded lot?
- Black vinyl-coated chain link outlasts cedar in constantly shaded, wet Silver Valley conditions. If you want cedar for privacy, oil or stain within the first year and re-coat every 3 years.
- How much does a fence cost in Maple Ridge?
- $55–$85 per linear foot for a 6-ft cedar privacy fence, $32–$48 for galvanized chain link, $42–$60 for black vinyl-coated chain link. Sloped or heavily treed Silver Valley lots add 10–15%.
Related services & guides
Bylaw & code references
- City of Maple Ridge — Fences
- BC Building Code (Building & Safety Standards Branch)
- WorkSafeBC — worksite safety standards
Bylaws are updated by municipalities from time to time — always confirm current requirements before starting work.
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