A large suburban township of newer subdivisions and remaining farmland in western Monmouth.
Marlboro is dominated by residential subdivisions and larger lots, with little flood exposure outside its stream corridors. Boundary surveys, topographic work for additions and pools, and construction stakeout for new homes are the steady requests.
Our Lavallette office is a straight run up the Parkway from Marlboro, and a licensed crew handles the boundary, topographic and stakeout work that Marlboro's building and resale activity depends on. Fifty years of records across the area means we can often resolve a line or an old monument faster than a firm starting from scratch.
Usually, yes. Marlboro zoning and building permits typically require a boundary or plot survey, and most additions, pools and new homes need topographic and stakeout work to set grades and placement.
Yes — a boundary survey ties your corners to record data so you know exactly where your lines fall before a fence, addition or a dispute with a neighbor. Marlboro's mix of subdivisions and larger lots is routine work for us.
We do — foundation stakeout, as-builts and final surveys for new homes and additions, coordinated with your builder and the town's certificate-of-occupancy requirements.
Send the address and your deadline and we'll get you a price and a date — fast.