Need to know exactly where your property lines are? Planning a construction project? Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the property surveying services you need in Rocky Point, NY.
Surveying Advantages
Local Surveying Experts
Islandwide Land Surveyors is a locally owned and operated surveying company serving homeowners, builders, and developers in Rocky Point, NY, and throughout Suffolk 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 Rocky Point, NY, and across Suffolk County, Islandwide Land Surveyors provides the surveying expertise you can rely on. Give us a call today at 516-496-7822.
Rocky Point is home to the site where American radio company RCA once operated a large transmitting and transmitter research facility, known as Radio Central. RCA began to transmit transatlantic radio messages from Radio Central over longwave after its opening on November 5, 1921.
On January 7, 1927, AT&T initiated the first transatlantic commercial telephone service, linking London and New York. AT&T’s transmitter was at Radio Central, and their receiver was in Houlton, Maine. The radiotelephone signal from Radio Central was received by the British General Post Office’s receiver facility in Cupar, Scotland.
The 5,200-acre (21 km2) Rocky Point site was decommissioned in 1978 and demolished in the 1980s. It now consists of many concrete ruins and downed telephone poles and radio towers, owned by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. It is part of the Rocky Point Pine Barrens State Forest, which is in the Long Island Central Pine Barrens. The site gives an interesting insight into the 1920s, because-being in the middle of the forest-the footprints of the site remain largely untouched since its operational period. The western terminus of the 125-mile-long (201 km) Paumanok Path hiking trail is in the forest, with the eastern terminus at the Montauk Point Light.
Learn more about Rocky Point.