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Locating property lines and determining areas of tracts of land in urban and rural areas, including reestablishing existing boundaries, creating boundaries for new tracts of land, and creating property line adjustments between adjoining land owners and writing new legal descriptions to local, county and state requirements.
Determining the configuration of the surface of the ground, its elevations, and the location aboveground and underground of both natural and man-made features. Topography, in conjunction with a boundary survey, gives complete information about a site.
Providing a design plan for land development including layout of lot and street configurations and also construction plans for erosion control, drainage, sewer lines, water lines, highway entrances and grading while complying with the codes of the local state or federal governing planning and zoning authorities.
Providing a staked layout of architectural or engineering design so that a project can be built in the proper place with the proper dimensions, including preliminary staking for vegetation clearing and providing control for utilities such as storm and sanitary sewer and water systems and for road layout. Layout of buildings (commercial, residential) highways and bridges.
Post construction, planametric or topographic survey often used to compare design plans to actual location or elevation.
Providing horizontal or vertical position data for placement of geodetic monuments, control for aerial photography and mapping, construction baselines and establishing elevation benchmarks.
Preparing a plan showing a strip or area of land, including areas on the surface, overhead, or underground, granted by deed or easment, for construction and maintenance according to designated use.
Locating property lines, utilitlies, planametric features, etc. related to building or maintaining a municipal or countywide Geographic Information System (GIS).
Preparing corporation boundary, annexation area, zoning, census, soils and easement location maps along with their appropriate types of descriptions.
Preparing a plat showing building layout and other improvements tied horizontally and vertically to the boundary of real property and showing other information such as drainage and connections to public access and utilities.
Preparing feasibility and concept studies for the highest and best use of land for residential and commercial sites.
Appearing as a professional witness regarding survey matters in adversarial situations such as boundary disputes.
Completing a plat to verify to a title company and bank that, by visual inspection, buildings and other improvements lie within a deeded real property boundary, and showing the location of occupation features in relation to the deeded property line, as well as providing scaled flood hazard information.
A person generally has occasion to employ a land surveyor only once or twice in a lifetime. Since such employment is so infrequent, the average person is not aware of the logical steps to be followed in selecting a land surveyor. To help in making such a selection, the answers to a few common questions are noted herein.
Land surveying is a learned profession. It requires precision, facility with applied mathematics, technical knowledge, ability for discriminating investigation, logical thinking, and judicious judgment. A land surveyor in the execution of his projects will work with lawyers, architects, engineers, urban planners, local government officials, and the public in general. He will be involved in both field and office work. In the design of urban subdivision, the land surveyor utilizes extensive surveying principles, applied mathematics, including computer techniques, basic civil engineering principles, photogrammetry, and electronic distance measuring equipment. He is involved in planning, office design and field layout of streets, property boundaries. The land surveyor works with the lawyer in writing land descriptions or in locating existing descriptions on the ground.
He also makes maps for architects, landscape experts, and urban planners to utilize for the design of houses, shopping centers, or housing developments. He does layout work for engineering projects. Hence land surveying requires knowledge in applied science and mathematics and basic planning, surveying, engineering, and legal principles.
All 50 states have laws requiring practicing land surveyors to be registered.
No, but he will give you his professional opinion of what the records and facts indicate your ownership to be. This opinion is satisfactory in over 99% of the surveys. Only a court of law can determine ownership. Only a Licensed Land Surveyor can take the described lines and lay them on the ground.
A surveyor is the only one qualified under law to prepare a description for a newly created parcel of land. He may prepare an individual description or, if several lots are being created simultaneously, he may prepare a legal plat with lot or parcel numbers for recording. Platting rules differ with each county or local planning area. A qualified surveyor would be familiar with local rules and procedures.
A surveyor can design streets, sanitary gravity sewers (not force mains) and storm sewers within a subdivision. He will recommend an engineer to design the water supply system and to perform other engineering services that might be required. A professional surveyor will not attempt any aspects of engineering design with which he is not familiar and qualified to perform.
Most engineering surveys are conducted by land surveyors. They are knowledgeable and equipped to prepare topographic surveys, to supply control for aerial photography, to layout construction projects, to survey right-of-way for power lines and roadways, and so forth.
Most survey work is acquired through the personal recommendation of satisfied clients or through attorneys who frequently handle real estate transactions. If it is difficult to obtain a recommendation, probably the most direct way would be to check the listings under "Surveyors-Land" in the classified section of the telephone directory or an internet search of the same category. According to state statutes, only licensed practitioners can advertise themselves as Land Surveyors. A third method would be to contact a state’s professional membership organization for a listing of its members practicing in your locality, such as Indiana Society of Professional Land Surveyors.
An engineer can perform a topographic survey or quantity survey, but he cannot perform a boundary survey unless he is registered as a professional surveyor.
A contractor cannot perform land survey work unless he is registered as a professional land surveyor. Also, beware of survey technicians who may be skilled in only some aspects of surveying – they are not licensed professionals.
As long as he is licensed in that state he can perform a survey in that state. Each state has its own licensing authority and the surveyor must pass each state’s individual requirements before practicing in that state.
Not usually. Final cost is dependent upon the kind of survey required and the difficulty encountered, which normally cannot be anticipated in advance. The cost is based on the time required to obtain the necessary information of record, to make the field survey of facts as they exist on the ground, to perform the required office computations leading to a plat or map of the findings, and to monument your lines on the ground.
Generally, it is an hourly rate times the number of hours the surveyor and his personnel have involved in the project. Also the client and surveyor my agree on a lump sum to be paid upon completion of the job.
Traditionally, contracts for surveys have been by oral agreement. Many surveys have been requested over the phone. However, in recent years it is becoming more common for the client to visit the surveyor’s office, discuss requirements of the survey and enter into a written contract which tends to assure a better understanding between the client and the surveyor.
Furnish the surveyor with an explanation of why the survey is desired. He will maintain confidence if requested by his client. With this purpose in mind a professional land surveyor can work most efficiently and reduce the client’s cost. If you have a deed or mortgage description, aerial photographs of the land, or an abstract, relay them to the surveyor. If you have knowledge of a stone, iron pipe, fence line, etc. that was reported to you as a property corner, pass the information along to the surveyor. He will make the professional judgment as to what evidence should be used.
The land surveyor renders a highly technical and complex service. He is a member of a professional team, which includes the land surveyor, title attorney, architect, and engineer. He prepares the foundation upon which your project is built or your problem is solved.
In case of litigation he will appear in court as your expert witness. His testimony is accepted by the court as evidence to which the greatest weight can be attached. No one other than he can assume responsibility for the correctness and accuracy of his work.