
Fencing across Murray Hill's planned subdivisions near Murray Scholls Town Center — the HOA-friendly styles that pass architectural review, the height rules that apply here, and the landmarks we work around.
Murray Hill is one of Beaverton's largest planned residential areas — a tidy grid of Murrayhill subdivisions wrapped around Murray Scholls Town Center and tracking along the Murray Boulevard corridor. Most homes here sit inside an active homeowners association, the yards are well kept, and the streets follow a deliberate plan rather than the older organic layout of downtown. Beaverton Fence Pro covers all of it, from a backyard privacy run on a single-family lot to screening fence for a retail tenant near Scholls Ferry Road.
We are a service-area company. We come to your property, build for the wet Pacific Northwest climate, and keep your fence inside both city code and your HOA's rules. There is no showroom and no published address — just a crew that shows up where the work is, on a single 24/7 line shared by homeowners and businesses alike. When you are ready for numbers and scheduling, the fencing in Murray Hill page covers the transactional details. Otherwise read on, then call (855) 598-3288 any time, day or night.
Murray Hill spans ZIPs 97007 and 97008 in southwest Beaverton, bordered by South Beaverton, Highland, and Sexton Mountain. The area is defined by its large planned subdivisions — the broader Murrayhill development and the streets that branch off it — laid out with uniform lots, consistent setbacks, and common-area greenbelts threaded between blocks. SW Murray Boulevard and Scholls Ferry Road are the two arterials that frame the neighborhood and carry most of its traffic, and the Beaverton School District and nearby Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District trails shape daily life here.
That planned character changes how fences get built. Lots tend to be graded evenly and sit at similar elevations, which makes for clean, predictable fence lines compared with the hillside neighborhoods to the south and west. The trade-off is governance: a typical Murrayhill subdivision carries detailed CC&Rs that dictate fence height, material, and even stain color, so the work that matters most here happens before the first post goes in. If you are unsure which subdivision or HOA you fall under, give us your cross streets and we will help you sort it out. We also fence the retail and office properties along the Murray Boulevard corridor, where the priorities shift toward screening and security.
If you live in a Murrayhill subdivision, your homeowners association almost certainly controls what your fence can look like. Most Murray Hill HOAs run an architectural review process, and the recorded CC&Rs spell out the approved height, the permitted materials, and often a specific stain or color so the neighborhood stays visually consistent. Skipping that step is the single most common mistake we see homeowners make — a fence that violates the CC&Rs can be flagged after it is built, and tearing out finished work to redo it is an expensive lesson.
We build to the approved style, not around it. Before anything is ordered, we put together the material specs, heights, and layout details your association needs for its architectural review, so you can submit a clean application and get a fast yes. Many Murrayhill HOAs favor solid cedar privacy fence or low-maintenance vinyl in set tones, and limit the use of chain-link in front-facing locations, so we steer the style toward what the committee already approves. Once you have the written go-ahead, we build exactly to that spec. The result is a fence that clears review the first time, matches the look of your street, and keeps you on the right side of both the association and the city.
The fence that fits a Murray Hill home is usually the one the HOA already approves, and across the Murrayhill subdivisions that tends to mean two materials. A solid cedar privacy fence is the classic choice — full backyard privacy in a warm, natural tone that committees readily accept, and because cedar is naturally rot-resistant it stands up to the wet climate for two decades or more when set properly. For owners who want the look without the upkeep, vinyl / PVC fence installation holds a clean white or tan line for decades with almost no maintenance, which makes it a favorite in HOA neighborhoods that value uniform appearance.
Traditional wood fencing remains a strong option for owners who want a custom picket profile or a stained finish to match an adjacent run, and we build it to the same code-and-climate standard as everything else. Horizontal-board styles appear on the newer, more contemporary homes in the area where the HOA allows them. Along the open common-area greenbelts and on view-facing edges, lower semi-private or ornamental sections sometimes make more sense than a solid six-foot wall. Whatever the material, the install quality decides how long it lasts: posts set in concrete footings with proper drainage hold their line through the winter ground swell, while a shallow-set "premium" fence heaves in a single wet season.
Every fence type we install across the Murrayhill subdivisions. Tap through for details or call to start.
Swap a tired subdivision fence for a clean, approved new line.
Screening and security fence for Murray Boulevard corridor tenants.
Get a QuoteReady to hire? See the Murray Hill hire page.Most Murray Hill calls start with a homeowner inside a Murrayhill subdivision who wants a new privacy fence, a tired run replaced, or a gate added — and who needs the whole thing to clear HOA architectural review without a fight. We handle that paperwork side as a matter of course, providing the specs the committee wants and building only once the approval is in hand. We also help owners weigh a targeted fence repair against a full fence replacement honestly: sound posts and a few bad panels point one way, rotted posts heaved out of line point the other.
The commercial side is real here too. The Murray Boulevard corridor and the area around Murray Scholls Town Center carry retail, medical offices, and multi-family communities, and they fence for different reasons than homeowners do — screening service yards, defining lot edges, and securing perimeters along busy arterials. We schedule that commercial & security fencing work around tenants and foot traffic on the same line as the residential jobs, so a property manager and a homeowner reach the same crew.

City fence rules come from the Beaverton Development Code and read the same across Murray Hill as they do citywide, sitting on top of whatever your HOA requires:
Corner lots are common on Murray Hill's planned blocks, and the vision-clearance triangle genuinely matters there — a six-foot run that ignores it can fail inspection. Heights are measured from finished grade, and along the common-area greenbelts the fence line often follows an HOA-defined edge rather than a hard property pin, so we confirm both the legal line and the association rule before we set posts. Where your CC&Rs are stricter than the city — a lower height, a required material, a set stain — the HOA rule wins, and we design the layout so the plan that gets approved is the plan that actually gets built.
Murray Hill is not all single-family yards. Murray Scholls Town Center sits at the heart of the area at SW Scholls Ferry Road and Murray Boulevard, and the corridor running north carries the bulk of the neighborhood's retail, medical, and office tenants. Those properties fence for screening and security — a screened enclosure for a service yard or dumpster, a controlled gate, or a defined perimeter along a busy arterial. We handle that work alongside the residential jobs and schedule it around business hours.
The landmarks themselves sit on commercial land we do not fence, but the homes and businesses around them are exactly what we work on every day. We fence fencing near Murray Scholls Town Center and the properties fencing along the Murray Boulevard corridor. If your property sits anywhere inside this footprint, you are squarely in our service area.
The Murrayhill spots we work near every week.
There is a clear pattern to how Murray Hill yards get fenced. Inside the Murrayhill subdivisions, backyards want full six-foot privacy in an HOA-approved material, while front sections stay low and open to satisfy both the city's 3.5-foot front limit and the association's desire for a consistent streetscape. Pet owners pair a privacy back run with a lower side line for visibility, and homes that back onto a common-area greenbelt often coordinate the rear edge with the HOA so the line reads cleanly from the shared space. Closer to the Murray Boulevard corridor, the work tilts toward screening, lot definition, and security for the businesses that line it.
The Pacific Northwest climate sets the build standard no matter the style. Long, wet winters keep the ground saturated, so footings have to be deep and well-drained, and rot-resistant cedar is the wood of choice for anyone who wants a wood fence to last. On the evenly graded subdivision lots the fence lines are predictable, but the post depth still decides longevity — water that sits against an undersized post is what rots and heaves it. We have built and replaced fences across these planned streets long enough to know how the committees think 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 Murray Hill fits the wider map, then call when you are ready.
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