Mainline Surveys
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Survey Costs & Quotes

Typical UK survey pricing and how to get a fixed quote for your project.

What Survey Do I Need for Planning Permission?

Most planning applications in the UK require accurate survey information to show how your proposals relate to the existing site. Submitting drawings based on outdated OS maps or rough measurements is a common cause of delays and refusals. This guide explains which surveys planners expect to see, and when you need a professional land surveyor involved.

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Do I Need a Survey Before Building an Extension?

Extensions and loft conversions often look straightforward on paper, but small site errors can quickly turn into expensive on-site changes. Surveying the existing building and garden before detailed design gives your architect reliable information on levels, structure and boundaries, reducing risk for everyone involved.

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Surveys Required Before Property Development

Successful developments are built on reliable site information. Before committing to design fees, planning applications and contractor appointments, developers need to understand the site’s constraints in three key areas: ground levels, buried services and existing structures. This guide outlines the core surveys that de‑risk early-stage feasibility and planning.

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Surveys for Architectural Design and BIM

Architects increasingly design in 3D and coordinate projects in BIM, but the quality of the model still depends on the quality of the survey data it is built on. This guide explains how topographical, measured building and laser scanning surveys can be structured to reduce modelling time, improve coordination and support better design decisions.

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What Is a Total Station in Land Surveying?

The total station is the core instrument used on most construction and land surveying projects. It combines an electronic theodolite with a distance meter and onboard software, allowing surveyors to measure angles and distances precisely and compute coordinates in real time.

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How GNSS Surveying Works on Construction Sites

GNSS surveying uses satellite signals to determine position on the Earth’s surface. On construction and infrastructure projects, it provides rapid positioning for control points, boundaries and large‑area topographical surveys. However, it must be used carefully and often in combination with total stations to meet design tolerances.

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What Is LiDAR Scanning in Surveying?

LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) uses laser pulses to measure millions of distances per second, building a dense 3D point cloud of terrain, buildings and infrastructure. It is used both from tripod‑mounted scanners and from drones or aircraft, providing a powerful way to capture complex sites quickly.

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What Is GPR Utility Mapping?

Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) is a non‑invasive technique used to detect changes in material below the surface. In utility surveys it helps identify buried pipes, cables, ducts and voids that may not appear on existing records, reducing the risk of service strikes and unexpected ground conditions.

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How Drone Mapping Works in Construction

Drone mapping uses overlapping aerial photographs and specialist software to reconstruct accurate 3D models and orthophotos of a site. When combined with ground control, the outputs can be accurate enough for design, earthworks planning and progress monitoring across large areas.

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How Drone Surveys Work

Drone surveys combine qualified pilots, survey control and specialist processing to turn aerial images into measurable data. When used correctly, they can complement or replace some traditional survey tasks, particularly on large or hard‑to‑reach sites.

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Drone Surveys vs Traditional Surveys

Drone surveys are not a drop‑in replacement for all traditional survey methods, but they are a powerful addition to the toolbox. Understanding the strengths and limitations of each approach helps you choose the right mix for your project.

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Are Drone Surveys Accurate Enough for Construction?

Drone surveys can achieve survey‑grade accuracy when they are properly controlled and used for appropriate tasks. However, the achievable accuracy always depends on flight height, camera quality, ground control strategy and site conditions. This guide sets realistic expectations for architects, engineers and contractors.

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How Long Does a Drone Survey Take?

Drone surveys are often significantly faster on site than traditional methods, but total project time still includes planning, permissions and data processing. This guide outlines realistic timescales so you can programme drone surveys alongside other project activities.

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When to Use Drone Surveys on Projects

Drone surveys are most effective when they address a clear project need: safer access, faster coverage, richer context or more frequent monitoring. This guide highlights common scenarios where drones add value, and when traditional methods may still be the better choice.

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Drone Surveys for Construction

Drone surveys are increasingly used throughout the construction lifecycle — from pre‑start site baselines and earthworks monitoring to as‑built verification and handover. They provide repeatable, georeferenced data that supports programme control, volume calculations and design compliance.

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Who Carries Out Drain Surveys – Drainage Companies or Surveyors?

Property owners are often unsure whether to call a drainage company, a land surveyor or a civil engineer when they need drains investigated. The answer depends on whether you are diagnosing a blockage or structural problem, or gathering information for design, planning or development.

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Drain Survey vs CCTV Drain Survey

The term “drain survey” is used loosely in the UK. Sometimes it means a simple CCTV camera run to identify a blockage; in other cases it refers to a full drainage investigation that maps pipe routes, depths and capacities for design. Understanding the difference helps you order the right level of service.

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Can Land Surveyors Inspect Drains?

Land surveyors are not a replacement for specialist drainage contractors, but they do play an important role in drainage‑related projects. Surveyors focus on location, levels and relationships between features; drainage companies focus on internal pipe condition and repair.

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Inspection Guides

What Survey Do I Need for Planning Permission?

Most planning applications in the UK require accurate survey information to show how your proposals relate to the existing site. Submitting drawings based on outdated OS maps or rough measurements is a common cause of delays and refusals. This guide explains which surveys planners expect to see, and when you need a professional land surveyor involved.

Do I Need a Survey Before Building an Extension?

Extensions and loft conversions often look straightforward on paper, but small site errors can quickly turn into expensive on-site changes. Surveying the existing building and garden before detailed design gives your architect reliable information on levels, structure and boundaries, reducing risk for everyone involved.

Surveys Required Before Property Development

Successful developments are built on reliable site information. Before committing to design fees, planning applications and contractor appointments, developers need to understand the site’s constraints in three key areas: ground levels, buried services and existing structures. This guide outlines the core surveys that de‑risk early-stage feasibility and planning.

What Survey Do I Need for Planning Permission?

Most planning applications in the UK require accurate survey information to show how your proposals relate to the existing site. Submitting drawings based on outdated OS maps or rough measurements is a common cause of delays and refusals. This guide explains which surveys planners expect to see, and when you need a professional land surveyor involved.

Do I Need a Survey Before Building an Extension?

Extensions and loft conversions often look straightforward on paper, but small site errors can quickly turn into expensive on-site changes. Surveying the existing building and garden before detailed design gives your architect reliable information on levels, structure and boundaries, reducing risk for everyone involved.

Surveys Required Before Property Development

Successful developments are built on reliable site information. Before committing to design fees, planning applications and contractor appointments, developers need to understand the site’s constraints in three key areas: ground levels, buried services and existing structures. This guide outlines the core surveys that de‑risk early-stage feasibility and planning.

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