Residents in a picturesque marina are no longer able to help out their neighbours on the water after housing bosses ripped out their plant-lined walls and replaced them with ‘prison-style’ fencing.
Narrowboat dwellers at Diglis Marina had previously managed to avoid a 20 minute walk home by leaving their shopping bags at metal railings situated near flats in Albion Mill, Worcester.
These bags would then be handed over to them by the flat’s kind-hearted residents, but apartment chiefs said the boat owners were trespassing when using the car park for a detour.
Despite allegedly receiving only two complaints about ‘trespassing’, the management company asked the flat’s occupants to cough up £10,000 for a new privacy fence.
Now, a temporary two-metre-high railing has been erected along the pontoon leaving the quaint marina ‘like a building site’.
Residents say FirstPort, which manage the apartments, ripped up the plants and decorations which had previously lined the waters edge, leaving behind an ‘eyesore’.
And those living on the boats now face a mile-long walk from their cars with their weekly shops, something which one resident described as ‘ridiculous’.
Diglis Marina’s Tony Wass, 67, says he spent over £1,000 decorating his side of the fence – but was shocked to hear contractors had removed it all while he was on holiday.
![Our picturesque marina has been ruined after housing bosses ripped out our plant-lined walls and replaced it with a prison-style fencing to stop us from helping boaters with their shopping Our picturesque marina has been ruined after housing bosses ripped out our plant-lined walls and replaced it with a prison-style fencing to stop us from helping boaters with their shopping](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127315-14388745-image-a-62_1739360801143.jpg)
Marina residents Tony Wass and Stuart Booth now face mile-long walk from their cars with their weekly shops because of the new ‘prison-style’ fencing
![A temporary two-metre-high railing has been erected along the pontoon leaving the quaint marina 'like a building site'](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127305-14388745-image-a-63_1739360815453.jpg)
A temporary two-metre-high railing has been erected along the pontoon leaving the quaint marina ‘like a building site’
![FirstPort, which manage the apartments, ripped up the plants and decorations which had previously lined the waters edge](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127327-14388745-image-a-64_1739360819536.jpg)
FirstPort, which manage the apartments, ripped up the plants and decorations which had previously lined the waters edge
He said: ‘It was put up after we went away for six months to Australia over Christmas.
‘FirstPort now say they own the wall. At some point they ripped the fence out and put this very badly fence up.
‘Albion Mill and our residence is not only ugly beyond belief but is also actually now compromising our security
‘It’s not safe as it’s held together with two cable ties. You can cut them in two seconds and get in without issues.
‘Now we wait I suppose and see what happens next. We have every intention of putting everything back. There hasn’t been any compromise from them.
‘We’ve got everyone telling me how awful the fence looks. It looked nice before.
‘It’s tarnished our whole view here. We have lovely friends in the community, but it just leaves a bitter taste in your mouth.’
Tony spends just under £9,000 a year to moor his longboat on Diglis Docks but says he’s now thinking about leaving.
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/12/86228929-14388745-image-a-94_1739362514675.jpg)
![](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/12/86228933-14388745-image-a-95_1739362518858.jpg)
![Tony (left) says he spent over £1,000 decorating his side of the fence - but was shocked to hear contractors had removed it all while he was on holiday](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127319-14388745-image-a-67_1739360839439.jpg)
Tony (left) says he spent over £1,000 decorating his side of the fence – but was shocked to hear contractors had removed it all while he was on holiday
![The two-metre-high railing has been erected along the pontoon leaving the quaint marina 'like a building site'](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127307-14388745-image-a-65_1739360827042.jpg)
The two-metre-high railing has been erected along the pontoon leaving the quaint marina ‘like a building site’
![Narrowboat dwellers had managed to avoid a 20 minute walk home by leaving their shopping bags at metal railings situated near flats in Albion Mill, Worcester](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127317-14388745-image-a-66_1739360835822.jpg)
Narrowboat dwellers had managed to avoid a 20 minute walk home by leaving their shopping bags at metal railings situated near flats in Albion Mill, Worcester
He says the trouble started last year when one angry resident spotted them transporting shopping over the old, lower fence, despite having the permission of a resident.
Tony added: ‘We get charged by Aquavista £6,000, on top of that we have to pay the Canal and River Trust over £1,200 for our licence.
‘Then there’s a risk of council tax which would add another £1,500 if we had to pay it, taking it onto £9,000.
‘Once we started handing things over our part of the fence, that’s when the situation started.’
Professional sound engineer Tony, who lives on the boat with his husband Stuart, says they are now facing a mile walk with their weekly shop.
He added: ‘We have to walk our shopping from the car now which is at least 1km away, and I’m 68 next month.
‘We could pull up by the side of the road illegally near the apartments but we don’t want to risk parking tickets.
‘There’s two ways to go, one is the circular path but that’s around mile. The only other option is to go over the top lock gate but it is dangerous.
![Professional sound engineer Tony, who lives on the boat with his husband Stuart, says they are now facing a mile walk with their weekly shop](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127313-14388745-image-a-69_1739360853327.jpg)
Professional sound engineer Tony, who lives on the boat with his husband Stuart, says they are now facing a mile walk with their weekly shop
![Residents say the fence is 'not safe' because held together with two cable ties](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127321-14388745-image-a-70_1739360855817.jpg)
Residents say the fence is ‘not safe’ because held together with two cable ties
![Tony spends just under £9,000 a year to moor his longboat on Diglis Docks but says he's now thinking about leaving](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127311-14388745-image-a-71_1739360861444.jpg)
Tony spends just under £9,000 a year to moor his longboat on Diglis Docks but says he’s now thinking about leaving
![One resident of the apartments said the new fence looked 'horrible' and made it 'look like a prison'](https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2025/02/12/11/95127297-14388745-image-a-72_1739360868547.jpg)
One resident of the apartments said the new fence looked ‘horrible’ and made it ‘look like a prison’
‘You could fall, slip, there’s also huge cast iron hinges that I’ve tripped over numerous times in the dock.
‘You’d have to walk a mile with your shopping from the car. It’s nonsense.
‘We’ll have to try and get the shopping over by other means, we’ll try and use a pole or something. The whole situation is ridiculous.’
One resident of the apartments, who did not want to be named, said: ‘It’s been a lot of fuss over nothing really, all to stop people passing over some shopping bags.
‘The fences there all looked really pretty and everybody looked out for each other – now we have this horrible fence that make it look like a prison.
‘They have already been up for a couple of months and who knows for how much longer. They are shoddily put up and a security issue too.
‘People are feeling a little bit more vulnerable and exposed and all over a couple of complaints about something so trivial.
‘Because two people didn’t like others being neighbourly, we’ve had our apartment complex turned into a building site. It’s barmy.’
A Firstport spokesperson said: ‘A section of the fence has already been raised, and temporary fence panels are in place for the remaining area.
‘The temporary fence will stay in place until work to extend the height of the original fencing is complete for the security of all our residents. We are looking to complete this work as a priority and will continue to provide updates to residents.’