aayjaber
Structural
- Feb 16, 2008
- 47
I hired a surveyor to do a TOPO map for my property. He produced a map with 2 ft increment contours of my property and on two of the adjacent 4 properties to a certain distance inside the neighboring properties. Two of the neighboring properties with no fence between mine and them and the surveyor was able to draw contour lines of those two properties. Between my property and the other two there is a wood fence of 6 ft height so the contour lines ended at the fence. The surveyor located the approximate locations of buildings behind the fence with elevation of the face and the corner of the buildings, there are also few points that mark the elevations behind the fence.
I have a request from the Grading Plan reviewer to draw elevations on the properties behind the fence, how can that be done while I do not have access to any thing behind the fence? Is it acceptable practice to take some of the elevations marked behind the fence and assume that is the finish grade on what is behind the fence? There is no doubt that the two properties sit on flat pads and there is no differential height so taking any one of the marked points (which are very close to each other in value) will be a true representation of the flat pads of the properties behind the fence.
Any thoughts on this?
Thanks
I have a request from the Grading Plan reviewer to draw elevations on the properties behind the fence, how can that be done while I do not have access to any thing behind the fence? Is it acceptable practice to take some of the elevations marked behind the fence and assume that is the finish grade on what is behind the fence? There is no doubt that the two properties sit on flat pads and there is no differential height so taking any one of the marked points (which are very close to each other in value) will be a true representation of the flat pads of the properties behind the fence.
Any thoughts on this?
Thanks