Need to know exactly where your property lines are? Planning a new building, or maybe adding a fence? Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the surveying services you need in Plandome Manor.
Surveying Advantages
Local Surveying Experts
Islandwide Land Surveyors is a locally owned and operated surveying company serving homeowners, builders, and developers in Plandome Manor, NY, and throughout Nassau County. We combine the latest technology with good old-fashioned fieldwork to provide our clients with reliable and accurate results. Our team is here to help you with all your surveying needs.
The Surveying Process
Understanding Land Surveys
Property surveys are essential for a variety of reasons. They help establish clear property boundaries, which can prevent legal disputes and ensure smooth real estate transactions. Surveys are also crucial for planning construction projects, ensuring that buildings and other structures are placed correctly. In Plandome Manor, NY, and across Nassau County, Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the surveying expertise you can rely on. Give us a call today at 866-808-5800.
The Village of Plandome Manor incorporated in 1931. Like the villages of Plandome and Plandome Heights to its south, Plandome Manor derives its name from the Latin ‘Planus Domus’, meaning plain, or level home. The manor house of Matthias Nicoll who was an early mayor of New York City and among the first generation of the Nicoll family on Long Island, was a wood-frame home built in the 1670s, and one of the first homesteads in this area of Cow Neck, the namesake of the Cow Neck Peninsula (also known as the Manhasset/Port Washington Peninsula). The manor itself was torn down in 1998 and replaced with another estate.
Author Frances H. Burnett, author of The Secret Garden, built her home, Fairseat, in Plandome Park in 1908, and lived there until her death in 1924. Burnett’s son, Vivian, and his wife Constance, had erected a home nearby on Bayview Road after their marriage. Following Frances Burnett’s death, her nephew, publisher Archer P. Fahnestock moved into Fairseat, but the home burned down leaving only the stucco carriage house and garden intact. In 1940, Fahnestock sold it to Leroy Grumman.
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