Main Road needs a children-safety-net page with a different emotional shape from pigeon nets or invisible grills. This is not mainly about droppings, view, or facade style. It is about the moments when a child reaches a balcony, window, or stair-side opening faster than the family expects.
The local fit matters because visible town-front homes where the balcony is part of daily life, road view, drying, and quick family movement. A broad balcony-safety explanation can miss the small details: a low sill, a reachable chair, a drying bucket, an old grill edge, or a railing gap that looks harmless until a child starts testing it.
4 to 7 ft road-facing balconies, front windows above shop-side movement, and railings where a child can pull a chair close before an adult notices need more than a broad sheet across the front. The installer has to check reachable zone height, base rail spaces, side-corner finish, tension, and whether the net can stay firm when touched or pressed.
Main Road work needs a neat outside line, careful hook placement, and a net that does not make the frontage look like a rough patch from the street. A good fit should feel calm and dependable, not temporary. The net should protect the edge while still allowing ordinary air, light, cleaning, drying, and family movement.
The decision comes down to the edge made safer without losing the only quick air-and-light space in a visible town home. The message stays strict and clean: safer opening, continued supervision, and fewer reachable weak points.
The measurement visit studies railing height, chair-climb risk, side gaps, wall strength, and whether the net line can stay straight from the road-facing side. This makes the guidance more useful for parents comparing real installation quality rather than only the cheapest per-square-foot number.