How Important is Land Surveying in Today’s World?

land surveying
Copyright c 123RF Stock Photos

Most of you have probably never thought about land surveying until you needed it at some point. Many of us hear about land surveying all the time but never really give it much thought. Since an investment in land and/or a home will likely be the largest investment you will ever make in your lifetime, knowing where your property lines are becomes very important indeed.

The art of land surveying was developed centuries ago. In fact, it’s one of the oldest professions in the world. The fact that it was used by man at such an early time and is still being used now shows how important surveying is to our survival.

The different uses of Land Surveying

Surveying land has many uses. Boundary surveying, for instance, allows you to know where your property corners or property lines are. This is especially helpful when disputes with a neighbor or with other people arise in terms of where your property ends.

If your family wants to divide a tract of land and transfer ownership to other family members, a boundary survey is the first step to do so. If you’re having a building constructed, it is very important that you have the land surveyed to make sure that you are not encroaching onto other peoples’ property. A mistaken building location is very expensive to fix so you might as well invest in a boundary survey to prevent this.

A topographic survey, or topo survey for short, is another important type of land surveying. A topo survey is done to locate natural and man-made features on a particular parcel of land. A topographic survey is different in that the elevation of the land is surveyed which means it can show man-made underground features, retaining walls, utility lines and etc.

Before you start any kind of construction activity, it’s important to have a topo survey done in the area so they’ll have an accurate record of the land’s existing conditions. Yes, that spot with the new mall in the neighborhood had to have a topo survey done first.

Now, a flood survey or flood determination – this is very important too. It isn’t evident just looking at a property whether you are at risk of flooding or not. And, in some cases, even looking at the flood maps doesn’t give you an accurate answer. The flood survey determines the elevation of the home and compares that to the base flood elevation.

This is the only way to be sure you’re not in a flood hazard zone. If you’ve just been told that you live in a flood-prone area, having that confirmed by a professional land surveyor would let you know how to best proceed.
When getting flood insurance, insurance companies would require an elevation certificate from you. A land surveyor would be able to assist you with this.

If a company wants to invest in another state, or if there is a national lender on a commercial project, they will likely need an ALTA Land Title Survey done before anything is constructed. An ALTA Land Title Survey is a lot like a regular boundary survey except that nationally accepted ALTA Standards are used to guide the surveying effort.

Land surveying standards vary widely from state to state and an ALTA Land Title Survey is used to cut down on this variation. Also, an ALTA Land Title Survey typically is more involved than the state standards variety. Because of this, an ALTA survey can be more anywhere from 50% to 200% more expensive than using the state standards only. If you need this type of survey, I suggest seeking an experienced land surveying company who is familiar with these additional requirements.

In summary, there are many uses for a land survey and for seeking the services of a land surveyor. If you’re unsure of your situation, consult ALTA Survey Chicago

author avatar
Surveyor

More Posts

A construction survey technician using ground penetrating radar to map underground utility lines before excavation
land surveying
Surveyor

Why a Construction Survey Matters in the Lead Pipe Crisis

Chicago’s lead pipe crisis keeps making headlines, but most people still miss the real problem hiding under the streets. Everyone talks about the aging water lines and the huge cost of replacing them. However, the part that slows everything down isn’t plumbing. It’s the lack of accurate underground maps. That’s

Read More »
Home inspector reviewing a loan closing survey in front of a house
alta survey
Surveyor

Why a Loan Closing Survey Can Protect Your Closing

If you plan to sell or refinance your home, now is the right time to get a loan closing survey. Cook County will send out its second property tax bills for 2024 on November 14, and payments are due by December 15. With the bills coming late and deadlines getting

Read More »
A land surveyor in safety gear using a laptop to record boundary survey data along a shoreline during an environmental cleanup
boundary surveying
Surveyor

How a Boundary Survey Guided a Major Spill Cleanup

When a half-million gallons of liquid asphalt spilled into the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal near Forest View, the city faced more than just a cleanup. Crews needed to know exactly where the spill spread, who owned the affected land, and which agencies were responsible for fixing it. That’s where

Read More »
Drone surveyor capturing aerial data over a river valley to monitor shoreline elevation changes after a seiche
land surveyor
Surveyor

How a Drone Surveyor Restores Accuracy After a Seiche

When Lake Michigan suddenly dropped last week, it surprised many Chicago residents and contractors. The National Weather Service said it was a seiche — a quick rise and fall in water levels caused by strong winds and air pressure shifts. The main reports came from Lake Erie, but the same

Read More »
Surveyor on site using total station equipment during a funding freeze affecting alta title survey projects
alta survey
Surveyor

How a Funding Freeze Delays ALTA Title Survey

Chicago’s Red Line Extension made headlines earlier this month—and not for the right reasons. Around $2 billion in federal transit funding remains on hold after a White House spending freeze, creating uncertainty for contractors, developers, and surveyors across the city. At first glance, this sounds like a transportation issue. But

Read More »
Aerial view of residential homes near a river showing different elevations and potential flood risk areas relevant to FEMA elevation certificate.
flood damage
Surveyor

FEMA Elevation Certificate: Keep Closings Moving

Buying a home is stressful enough. Add a flood insurance freeze into the mix, and you’ve got chaos. In the last few days, the federal government’s shutdown caused the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) to pause new and renewed policies nationwide. That’s bad news for anyone trying to close on

Read More »