
Fencing across Five Oaks, between Sunset Highway and Tualatin Hills Nature Park — the styles that suit nature-edge and wooded lots, plus the wet-ground footings and height rules that hold a fence here.
Five Oaks is a green, varied neighborhood on Beaverton's west side, set between Sunset Highway and the trails of Tualatin Hills Nature Park. It mixes single-family homes with townhomes and condos, runs roughly half owners and half renters, and wraps around two major Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District amenities — the nature park and the HMT Recreation Complex. Paired with Triple Creek as the Five Oaks / Triple Creek NAC, it sits in ZIP 97006. Beaverton Fence Pro covers this whole area, from a privacy run on a wooded back lot to a tidy enclosure for a townhome community.
We are a service-area company. We come to your property, build for the wet Pacific Northwest climate, and keep your fence within city code and any HOA rules. There is no showroom and no published address — just a crew that shows up where the work is. Homeowners on the nature-edge streets and HOA communities near the recreation complex both call the same number. When you are ready for numbers, the fencing in Five Oaks page covers the transactional side. Otherwise, read on, and call (855) 598-3288 any time, day or night.
Five Oaks sits in ZIP 97006, tucked south of Highway 26 (Sunset Highway) and bounded on the south and west by green space — most notably Tualatin Hills Nature Park at 15655 SW Millikan Way, with its miles of trails through forest and wetland. Millikan Way runs through the area, and the freeway gives quick access in and out. The housing is a true mix: single-family streets sit alongside townhome and condo developments, and the area runs close to an even split between homeowners and renters, which is unusual for the west side.
The neighborhood is the larger half of the Five Oaks / Triple Creek NAC, paired with Triple Creek next door. Its defining feature for fencing is the green edge: lots that back onto the nature park, wetland buffers, or wooded corridors stay damp and shaded far longer than open ground, and that changes how a fence has to be built. Beyond the nature park, the area holds the HMT Recreation Complex, a 92-acre THPRD facility with pools, courts, and fields that anchors a band of HOA and townhome communities. Five Oaks borders Triple Creek and West Beaverton, so a job here often sits within a few blocks of one of those areas. The split between wooded single-family lots and managed townhome communities is exactly why a fence overview matters here. If you are not sure which part of Five Oaks you fall in, give us your cross streets and we will sort it out.
The fence that fits depends on the lot. For the wooded, nature-edge backyards that define much of Five Oaks, cedar privacy fence is the natural choice — full 6-foot privacy that disappears into the treeline and shrugs off the damp. Cedar earns its place because it is naturally rot-resistant, which matters more here than almost anywhere, since lots backing onto the nature park or wetland buffers stay wet for months. Traditional wood styles suit established single-family streets and blend with what the neighborhood runs.
For townhome and condo owners, and anyone who wants minimal upkeep, vinyl / PVC fence installation holds a clean white or tan line for decades without staining — a common pick in the managed communities near the recreation complex. Horizontal fence installation gives a modern slat look that suits newer architecture and reads well against a green backdrop. Chain-link stays the budget choice for back lots and dog runs, and it can be screened with slats or plantings where it borders the woods. Whatever the style, the install quality matters more than the label: on damp, nature-edge ground, posts set deep in concrete with drainage are the only thing that keeps a fence plumb. A cedar fence set right in concrete will outlast a "premium" fence dropped shallow in wet dirt, every time. We plan that build during the on-site estimate.
Five Oaks' green edge is its charm and its challenge. Lots that back onto Tualatin Hills Nature Park, wetland buffers, or wooded corridors hold moisture far longer than open ground, and a fence built without accounting for that is the one that rots and leans early.
Park-edge and wetland-adjacent ground stays saturated. Posts get set in concrete footings with proper drainage so the wet does not rot or heave them.
Cedar and vinyl earn their keep on damp lots because they resist the constant moisture that kills cheaper, untreated wood.
Where a lot meets protected green space, we lay the line to respect any setback or buffer and confirm the boundary at the estimate.

City fence rules come from the Beaverton Development Code and read the same across Five Oaks as they do citywide. The basics:
If you live in one of the townhome or condo communities near the HMT Recreation Complex, an HOA almost certainly sits on top of these city limits, often dictating the allowed height, material, and color and requiring approval before you build. Lots bordering the nature park or a wetland buffer can carry an additional setback from the protected edge. Heights are measured from finished grade. We confirm the city code, any HOA spec, and any buffer setback for your specific lot during the estimate so the approved plan is the one that goes in the ground.
Two THPRD landmarks define the Five Oaks area, and while the parkland itself is public and we do not fence it, the homes and communities ringing those landmarks are exactly what we work on. Around Tualatin Hills Nature Park, the residential lots that back onto the trails and forest need fences built for the damp, shaded conditions the park's edge creates — full privacy in cedar that holds up where the ground stays wet. We cover that work near fencing near Tualatin Hills Nature Park every week.
Near the HMT Recreation Complex — the 92-acre facility with pools, courts, and fields — the surrounding band of townhomes, condos, and HOA communities calls for tidy, conforming fence work: shared-edge enclosures, courtyard fencing, and replacements matched to a community's approved style. That is the fencing near the HMT Recreation Complex side of our coverage. Whether your property sits along a forest trail or inside a managed community by the complex, you are inside our core Five Oaks service area, on the same 24/7 line.
The Five Oaks spots and neighbors we work near every day.
There is a practical pattern to how Five Oaks yards get fenced, and it follows the green edge. Lots backing onto the nature park or a wooded corridor want full 6-foot privacy in a rot-resistant material, set on footings built for damp ground. In the townhome and condo communities near the recreation complex, the work runs toward shared-edge enclosures, courtyard fencing, and replacements matched to a community's approved look. Front sections everywhere stay low and open for the 3.5-foot limit, and pet owners on the family streets often pair a privacy back fence with a lower side run for visibility.
The Pacific Northwest climate sets the build standard, and the wet, wooded edges here push it harder. Saturated, shaded soil is what rots and heaves an undersized post, so footings have to be deep and well-drained, and cedar or vinyl is the material of choice for anyone who wants a fence to last on damp ground. We have built and rebuilt fences along these nature-edge streets and in these managed communities long enough to know how the wet behaves and how to set a line that holds. Explore the full menu of our fencing services, or look across the city through the all Beaverton neighborhoods overview to see how Five Oaks fits the wider map.
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