I'm installing a new garden fence for the back garden. There's an alley between the house and neighbour's house followed by a short stretch of fence about 1.2m long between posts B and C (post C attaches to the back wall of the house) then a 90cm wide gate from post B to post A and thereafter the fence continues to the bottom of the garden. The ground is made up of paving stones and solid concrete. The "old" post B was solid concrete cemented into the ground and has now been removed ready for the new post.
I need to recreate the same appearance but there's a sting in the tail as I need to be able to remove Post B occasionally. Next to Post C are French windows into the back room and I'm planning to get a grand piano; the only way of getting it into the room is through the French windows but due to the angles it wouldn't fit through the gate as things stand, so Post B and the panel between B and C need to be detachable. And if I ever move house I'll need to remove them again...
One option I've considered is a fence post inserted into a fence post shoe bolted into the paving such as:
https://www.screwfix.com/p/sabrefix-bolt-down-post-supports-75-x-75mm-2-pack/99237
However, the post AND the shoe must be removable, otherwise the shoe is going to get in the way of the removal people as they will need to wheel the piano over where the post goes on a trolley. Can the shoe be bolted in in such a way that it can be removed and reused occasionally? If so what sort of screws should be used, and would I also need to fit plastic dowels for the screws to grip the concrete? Or can you get shoes that are flush with the surface?
Overhead view:
Alternatively I could get a pair of gates that hinge at the point where post B is - but they would have to swing as shown below and they have to be different widths too. As most of the time I want to walk from the alley into the garden rather than into the house, having the gate on Post A and open into the garden isn't an option as it would just get in the way, and having it hinge on post A and open into the passageway isn't great either (image below). And what sort of ground fixing would I need at the point where the two panels would hinge to stop the wider panel from moving except when it needs to be for getting a piano through?
Any better suggestions would be much appreciated!
I need to recreate the same appearance but there's a sting in the tail as I need to be able to remove Post B occasionally. Next to Post C are French windows into the back room and I'm planning to get a grand piano; the only way of getting it into the room is through the French windows but due to the angles it wouldn't fit through the gate as things stand, so Post B and the panel between B and C need to be detachable. And if I ever move house I'll need to remove them again...
One option I've considered is a fence post inserted into a fence post shoe bolted into the paving such as:
https://www.screwfix.com/p/sabrefix-bolt-down-post-supports-75-x-75mm-2-pack/99237
However, the post AND the shoe must be removable, otherwise the shoe is going to get in the way of the removal people as they will need to wheel the piano over where the post goes on a trolley. Can the shoe be bolted in in such a way that it can be removed and reused occasionally? If so what sort of screws should be used, and would I also need to fit plastic dowels for the screws to grip the concrete? Or can you get shoes that are flush with the surface?
Alternatively I could get a pair of gates that hinge at the point where post B is - but they would have to swing as shown below and they have to be different widths too. As most of the time I want to walk from the alley into the garden rather than into the house, having the gate on Post A and open into the garden isn't an option as it would just get in the way, and having it hinge on post A and open into the passageway isn't great either (image below). And what sort of ground fixing would I need at the point where the two panels would hinge to stop the wider panel from moving except when it needs to be for getting a piano through?
Any better suggestions would be much appreciated!