Land Surveying
DIMCO has immense and wide-ranging experience in land based topographic surveying, construction surveying, horizontal/vertical control surveying, and boundary surveying. Our personnel have routinely utilized total stations, data collectors, and GPS to collect data for the mapping of the following types of projects:
Site Investigation Design
Water Control Structures
Levee Seepage Studies
Stream and Stream Bank Mapping
Boundary Surveys
Dams
Dikes
Weirs
Canals and Drainage Ditches
Floodways
Monitoring Surveys
Beaches and Breakwater
Route Locations
Lock and Dams
Pumping Plants
Hydraulic Studies
Harbors
Military Installations
Gated Structures
Roads/Utilities
As-Built Surveys
GPS Grid Networks, NGS blue booking
Monitoring Surveys
River Surveys
Engineering Surveys
Precise Structural Deformation Surveys
Construction Layout and Alignment Surveys
Property/Boundary Demarcation Surveys
Utility Location Surveys
Aerial Photography flight control panels
A current title commitment is required before an ALTA Survey can be completed. The surveyor will refer to the title commitment for the legal description of the property and for the legal description of any encumbrances (exceptions). Areas of ownership, improvements, and encumbrances will be shown graphically. If the survey discovers any encroachments, they should be shown graphically, and a note indicating the nature of the encroachment may also be added.The certification language of the ALTA Survey should include the names of the affected parties, including as appropriate the buyer, seller, title company, and lender. The surveyor must work in close association with the title insurance company, as the surveyor and the title company are relying on each other's work to show the matters affecting the ownership of the land and improvements in a comprehensive manner.An ALTA land survey has especially stringent requirements as developed by a joint effort of the American Land Title Association and the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. The ALTA standards are a nationwide uniform set of standards. Sometimes referred to as the "Cadillac of surveys". The survey is specifically designed to satisfy the needs of lenders, corporations and title companies when dealing with valuable commercial properties.”
A current title commitment is required before an ALTA Survey can be completed. The surveyor will refer to the title commitment for the legal description of the property and for the legal description of any encumbrances (exceptions). Areas of ownership, improvements, and encumbrances will be shown graphically. If the survey discovers any encroachments, they should be shown graphically, and a note indicating the nature of the encroachment may also be added.The certification language of the ALTA Survey should include the names of the affected parties, including as appropriate the buyer, seller, title company, and lender. The surveyor must work in close association with the title insurance company, as the surveyor and the title company are relying on each other's work to show the matters affecting the ownership of the land and improvements in a comprehensive manner. An ALTA land survey has especially stringent requirements as developed by a joint effort of the American Land Title Association and the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. The ALTA standards are a nationwide uniform set of standards. Sometimes referred to as the "Cadillac of surveys". The survey is specifically designed to satisfy the needs of lenders, corporations and title companies when dealing with valuable commercial properties.”
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