Yes, pay an engineer or a land surveyor to determine the area of the site.Pay your engineer to measure the land
An experienced engineer/land surveyor will generally be able to make a fairly good guess. When shown a flat rectangular plot of land which is fenced off they would have a very good idea of its acerage.When he says it is a third of an acre does he mean 0.3333333333333 acres or 0.333333333332 ac or 0.3333 ac or .333 or .331 or .3 or .29?
If the plot boundaries exist on the OS map then he would be able to scale the map and determine the acerage.[/quote]How can he know how big it is if he does not measure it? Answer he cannot know.
Agreed, generally a site like this would not be sold on a price per acre basis . You would need to offer the vendor an amount for the site.Measure it and move on to the next stage of the purchase, if there is to be a purchase!!!
This is the same auctioneer who originally told you he'd measured it himself, right?The auctioneer said that the engineer who measured it thinks that there is even more than a half there!!
Just received the maps in the post and it doesn’t outline what size it is. I spoke with the engineer and he said that he can go back down but he knows himself that it’s definitely only a third.
Just received the maps in the post and it doesn’t outline what size it is.
Why would you not get planning on 1/3 acre? Why does it need to be 1/2 acre anyway, this makes no sense to me - not everybody wants a 1/2 acre, due to a big garden etc.
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