First let me tell you why Saturday. I hate being on a job site when there are people everywhere and mixers and different pieces of equipment are running. The footings were poured (90 yards of concrete with #6 and #8 bar) and there was zero chance of me seeing anyone and since it is a flat rate per task job I got it done faster without interruption and turned a better profit.
While I was working away I found myself thinking of the methods of the past and how things have evolved to the extent that aside from specialty the construction staking surveyor will soon be gone.
Examples:
1) Machine control. I love it. I love the idea of having to go in, set a few control points and get out.
2) Grade checkers with gps units. Once again I love it due to the fact that I never have to pound another hub and the contractor is absorbing all of the liability.
3) Construction companies that hire on staff surveyors to do the staking. Awesome!!
Once again it removes the liability from us and dumps it on the contractor.
(Note: I was on a job site recently and the concrete guy who I have known for years came up and asked if I was busy. I told him that I was swamped. He was amazed and asked who I was staking for. I told him that I mostly do survey work and that I do very little layout stuff and I have never considered staking anything more than revenue. The confused look on his face said it all. He had no idea what survey work is and that is scary.)
As technology progresses more companies will move forward in this direction and big engineering firms will cut back their survey field crews as they will no longer be needed.
This will be good for the companies that only do surveying. The big machines will no longer be a factor and we can concentrate on surveying and people will actually begin to understand what we do and the value of it.
The career hub pounder will either evolve into professional LS or go away.
Some will argue that this is a horrible thing and we need to be worried about the future of survey dollars.
I say bullshit. If we evolve with technology and progress with the future we will all prosper and be much better for the loss of staking. This actually gives us the opportunity to focus on becoming a true profession through education and drive the evolution of surveying into new areas.
Surveyors will always be involved in construction to an extent in areas that require extreme accuracy, as-builts, and legal issues and yes some staking, but the days of spending 6 months to 3 years on a single site are numbered.
I for one think this is one of the best things that can happen to a professional land surveyor.
Hooray the future!!!!!!!!!!!!!!