Why Accurate Surveys Prevent Disputes and Delays
Land Surveying Explained: Why Accurate Surveys Prevent Disputes and Delays
Land surveying is one of the most overlooked steps in property development, yet it is often the difference between a
smooth approvals and construction process and a project stuck in disputes, redesigns, and costly delays.
In South Africa, boundary uncertainty, incorrect levels, missing servitudes, and outdated site information can quickly
escalate into legal headaches and construction errors. A professional land survey gives you reliable, defensible data
before you commit to design, approvals, or earthworks.
Ocean Sounds supports developments by coordinating land surveying with town planning, architecture,
civil engineering, structural engineering, and programme and project management. This guide explains what land surveying is,
when you need it, and how accurate surveys protect your timeline and budget.
What is land surveying?
Land surveying is the process of measuring and mapping land features, boundaries, levels, and
constraints using specialised instruments and established methods. The outcome is a set of plans and data that can be
used for design, municipal submissions, construction setting-out, and legal boundary clarity.
A proper survey helps confirm what is on the ground versus what is on paper, including boundaries, servitudes, access,
existing structures, and elevation changes across the site.
Why accurate surveys matter for development projects
If you design or build using incorrect site information, problems tend to appear late, when changes are most expensive.
Accurate surveying improves certainty at the start, which protects your budget and programme.
- Fewer disputes: Boundaries and servitudes are clarified early.
- Fewer redesigns: Architects and engineers design using verified levels and constraints.
- Cleaner approvals: Municipal submissions are more accurate and defensible.
- Better construction accuracy: Setting-out reduces errors in positioning and levels.
- Reduced variation costs: Less rework and fewer surprises on site.
Common types of land surveys
Topographical survey
A topographical survey maps the site in detail, including levels, slopes, existing structures,
boundary indicators, access points, and natural or built features. This is commonly used for design development and
planning submissions.
Boundary or cadastral survey
A boundary or cadastral survey focuses on the legal boundaries of a property and may include beacon
verification or re-establishment. It helps prevent encroachment disputes and supports transactions and approvals.
Construction setting-out
Setting-out transfers the design to the ground so contractors can build in the correct position and levels. It is
essential for foundations, structural work, roads, and services alignment.
As-built survey
An as-built survey records what was actually constructed. It supports completion documentation, compliance, asset
registers, and future maintenance or upgrades.
Engineering surveys (civil and services)
These surveys support civil engineering works such as roads, stormwater, bulk earthworks, and underground services.
They often rely on precise levels and alignment requirements.
When you should commission a land survey
If you are unsure whether you need a survey, a good rule is: if site data affects cost, approvals, or construction,
you need verified information early.
Typical points where land surveying is essential include:
- Before purchasing a property (due diligence and boundary confidence)
- Before concept design (topography, constraints, access and services)
- Before planning submissions (accurate plans reduce approval friction)
- Before earthworks (levels and cut/fill impacts cost heavily)
- Before construction starts (setting-out and boundary clarity)
- After construction (as-builts, compliance packs, future upgrades)
How accurate surveys prevent disputes and delays
1) Preventing boundary and encroachment disputes
Disputes often happen when fences, walls, or structures are built on an assumed boundary. A boundary-focused survey
provides clarity and reduces the risk of legal conflict, demolition, or rework.
2) Identifying servitudes and constraints early
Servitudes, access rights, and municipal infrastructure constraints can limit where you can build. Identifying these
early prevents redesigns and delays after plans are already developed.
3) Getting levels right to control earthworks costs
Earthworks can become a major budget line item when levels are assumed or inaccurate. Verified topographic data helps
civil engineers and quantity surveyors model cut and fill, stormwater flow, and retaining requirements more reliably.
4) Improving planning and building plan submissions
Approvals can slow down when plans contain incorrect site information or clashes with constraints. A quality survey
supports more accurate submissions and reduces back-and-forth during approvals.
5) Reducing construction errors through correct setting-out
Misplaced buildings, incorrect levels, and services clashes cause delays and expensive corrective work. Proper setting-out
reduces errors by aligning the build with the design from day one.
6) Providing defensible evidence when disputes arise
When disagreements happen between neighbours, contractors, or stakeholders, survey records provide objective data that
supports resolution. This can prevent escalation and keep projects moving.
A simple land survey brief checklist
To get the right survey outputs, provide a clear brief. Here is a practical checklist you can use:
- Project address and erf details (and any existing diagrams if available)
- Purpose of the survey (design, approvals, boundary clarity, setting-out, as-builts)
- Required deliverables (plan formats, digital files, contours, coordinate system)
- Known constraints (servitudes, neighbours, access issues, security requirements)
- Timeline requirements (submission dates and project milestones)
- Contacts for site access and stakeholder coordination
If your project includes town planning or approvals, ensure the survey outputs match the submission requirements to
reduce delays.
Land surveying is a small step that protects the whole project
Land surveying is not only a technical task. It is a risk-reduction step that supports better design decisions, smoother
approvals, and fewer disputes. Accurate surveys provide the foundation for architecture, engineering, planning, and
construction to work together without costly surprises.
If you are planning a development, refurbishment, or infrastructure project, Ocean Sounds can help
coordinate land surveying within a turnkey delivery approach, aligning survey data with town planning, engineering, and
programme and project management to protect time and budget.
FAQ
1) What is the difference between a topographical survey and a boundary survey?
A topographical survey maps site features and levels for design and planning. A boundary survey focuses on legal
boundaries and beacon verification to prevent encroachment and disputes.
2) When should I do a land survey for a development project?
Ideally before concept design and before submitting any planning or building plans. Verified data early reduces
redesigns, approval delays, and construction errors.
3) Can surveying help with rezoning or town planning applications?
Yes. Accurate site data supports clearer submissions and helps identify constraints that could affect land use rights
and proposed layouts.
4) What causes most land disputes during development?
Common causes include assumed boundaries, unclear servitudes, encroachments, and building without verified setting-out.
A proper survey reduces these risks.
5) Does setting-out really matter if the drawings are correct?
Yes. Setting-out ensures the build is positioned correctly on the ground, matching the design and boundary constraints.
Without it, even correct drawings can be built incorrectly.


