The Shift to the Desk â How We Got Here
There was a timeânot long agoâwhen the only way to become a surveyor was to spend years in the field. You learned by sweating through misclosures, dragging chains through briars, watching sun angles change your readings, and feeling the difference between solid ground and subtle sink. That kind of apprenticeshipâthe kind that made good surveyors greatâwas forged outdoors, not behind a monitor. But those days are slipping fast.
In the past two decades, land surveying has undergone a radical transformation. On the surface, itâs progress: GPS receivers accurate to millimeters, drones capturing topography in hours instead of days, office software doing in minutes what used to take a day of manual calculations. The profession has become more efficient, more productive, more⌠comfortable. But somewhere in that transition from steel tapes to satellite constellations, a tectonic shift occurredânot in the Earth, but in our expectations.
Today, many survey