Phase 1: Tree Constraints Plan and Data Collection

Before any serious design work starts, BS5837 expects you to gather the right information on trees and turn it into a clear tree constraints plan. This early phase underpins everything that follows, from layout decisions to planning submissions.​

Step 1: Topographical and Site Survey

The starting point is a good topographical survey. BS5837 says this should:​

  • Be to a known scale, with north point, scale bar and clear paper size.​
  • Plot all trees on or close to the site with stem diameter of 75 mm or more at 1.5 m height, plus off‑site trees that could influence the project.​
  • Record spot levels across the site, including at the base of trees, edges, embankments, ditches and retaining features.​
  • Show other relevant features: buildings, boundaries, streams, hedges, stumps and underground/overhead services.​

This plan becomes the base drawing for the tree constraints plan.​

Step 2: Tree Survey – What Data Is Collected?

An arboriculturist then undertakes a BS5837 tree survey, using the topo as their base. Each individual tree, group or woodland is recorded in a schedule and plotted on the plan.​

For each tree (or group) the survey should capture:

  • Reference number linked to the plan, and usually a physical tag on the stem.​
  • Species (common name, with scientific name key if needed).​
  • Height and stem diameter (measured to BS5837 conventions, including special cases like multi‑stem trees).​
  • Crown spread at the four cardinal points, plus height and direction of the first significant branch and canopy base.​
  • Life stage (young, semi‑mature, early mature, mature, over‑mature).​
  • Structural and physiological condition, with notes on defects, decay, pests, disease and any urgent work.​
  • Estimated remaining contribution in years (10, 10–20, 20–40, 40+).​
  • BS5837 category grade (U, A, B or C, with subcategories 1/2/3).​

This converts individual trees into usable design data rather than just “green blobs” on a drawing.​

Step 3: Tree Quality Grading – What Is a Constraint?

The BS5837 category tells you how important each tree is to retain. In Phase 1 you’re not yet deciding exactly what to keep or remove, but you are flagging where the main constraints lie.​

  • Category A (light green): high quality, long life, major design constraint.​
  • Category B (blue): moderate quality, still a significant constraint.​
  • Category C (grey): low quality/young, less of a constraint, often replaceable.​
  • Category U (dark red): unsuitable for retention beyond 10 years, normally removed for safety/management reasons.​

On the constraints plan, these categories are both coloured and referenced so designers can see at a glance where the priority trees are.​

Step 4: Root Protection Areas (RPAs)

The other key dataset for a constraints plan is the Root Protection Area. BS5837 defines the RPA as the minimum area around a tree that must be protected to keep it viable.​

  • For a single‑stem tree, the RPA radius is 12 × stem diameter, converted via a standard table and capped at 707 m².​
  • For multi‑stem trees, combined stem diameter is calculated using prescribed formulae and then converted to an equivalent circular area.​
  • RPAs are first plotted as circles but can be reshaped into polygons if roots are likely to be asymmetric (due to roads, buildings, slopes, drainage, etc.).​

These RPAs become “no go” zones for normal construction and are a primary below‑ground constraint for layout.​

Step 5: Building the Tree Constraints Plan

Once the data is collected, the tree constraints plan is simply all of that information overlaid on the topo. It is not yet a protection plan or method statement; it’s a design‑tool drawing that shows:​

  • All surveyed trees, numbered and colour‑graded by BS5837 category.​
  • The crown spreads, so above‑ground space and shading can be understood.​
  • The RPAs, as circles or adjusted polygons, to show below‑ground constraints.​
  • Other key contextual features (levels, boundaries, buildings, services) from the topo.​

Design teams can then test early layout options against this constraints plan before committing to detailed design.​

Why Doing Phase 1 Properly Saves Time

BS5837 is clear that tree survey and constraints work should happen before detailed design, not as an afterthought. Early, accurate constraints mapping:​

  • Reduces the risk of costly redesign when conflicts with important trees are found late.​
  • Gives planners confidence that trees are being treated as a genuine constraint from the outset.​
  • Helps identify realistic developable areas and where new planting could later provide mitigation.​

Contact us to find out more

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Devon Tree Services

Our Newsletter

Drop your email here and you will receive all our latest news and updates!