Land Surveyor in Glen Cove, Nassau County

Accurate Property Surveys

Need a clear picture of your property boundaries? Islandwide Land Surveyors provides professional surveying services in Glen Cove.

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Land Surveyor in Glen Cove, NY, Nassau County

Benefits That Make A Difference

  • Blueprint accurate surveys prevent construction errors and keep property intact.
  • Clearly defined property lines are a fence between feuding neighbors.
  • Thorough title surveys serve as an insurance over potential hidden issues.
  • Detailed topographic surveys help you avoid those unexpected moments.
  • A yellow and black surveyor's level tripod stands on a wooden surface outdoors. Several architectural blueprints are laid out nearby. The background features wooden buildings with large windows.

    Meet the Islandwide Land Surveyors Team

    Your Local Surveying in NY

    At Islandwide Land Surveyors, we’re not just your average surveying company; we’re your advisors in property lines and land development. Our team in Nassau County combines experience with technology to create success for every project. We’re focused about understanding your land, whether you’re a homeowner with a boundary dispute, a developer planning a new project, or a business owner looking to expand, and building lasting relationships with our clients.

    A theodolite on a tripod stands in front of a topographic map. The map features land contours, trees, water bodies, and marked points, blending into a white space on the right.

    The Surveying Process

    Our Collaborative Approach

  • We’ll start with discussing your project goals and relieve any concerns you may have.
  • Our team will carefully analyze your property, identifying the challenges being faced.
  • You’ll receive a clear and concise report that includes the findings in plain language
  • A construction worker wearing a white hard hat and gray uniform uses a walkie-talkie while holding a red clipboard. Next to him is a total station surveying instrument. The sky is clear with a few clouds.
    A yellow surveying instrument, possibly a theodolite or total station, is set up on a tripod on a construction site. The background shows a blurred, sunlit dirt road surrounded by trees. The scene suggests early stage construction work.

    The Value of Professional Surveying

    Understanding Your Property

    For any property owner in NY, a professional land survey is a detailed roadmap for your land, revealing boundaries, elevations, and risks that you might not see right away, making our service imperative. At Islandwide Land Surveyors, we offer your property surveying services in Glen Cove, including boundary surveys, topographic surveys, and construction surveys to make sure they can guide you towards cost-effective and productive results. Contact us at 866-808-5800 to schedule for your land ownership.

    Contact Information

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    About Island-Wide Land Surveyors

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    Ancient cultures of indigenous peoples had lived in the area for thousands of years. At the time of European contact, bands of the Lenape (Delaware) nation inhabited western Long Island and the areas along today’s New York Harbor and adjacent New Jersey, as well as further south down the coast, through present-day Pennsylvania and Delaware, and along the Delaware River. They spoke an Algonquian language. By 1600, however, the band inhabiting this local area was called the Matinecock (Metoac), after their location.

    Glen Cove was used as a port by the English, and for those coming and going further inland to New England. On May 24, 1668, Joseph Carpenter of Warwick, Rhode Island, purchased about 2,000 acres (8.1 km2) of land to the northwest of the Town of Oyster Bay from the Matinecock. Later that year, he admitted four male residents of Oyster Bay as co-partners in the project-the brothers Nathaniel, Daniel, and Robert Coles along with Nicholas Simkins. The five young men named the settlement ‘Musketa Cove Plantation’, musketa meaning “place of rushes” in the Lenape language.

    In the 1830s, steamboats started regular service on Long Island Sound, between New York City and Musketa Cove, arriving at a point still called The Landing. As the Lenape word Musketa was incorrectly associated with the English word mosquito, in 1834, residents changed the name officially to Glen Cove; this was said to be taken from a misheard suggestion of Glencoe (referring to Glencoe, Scotland or Glencoe, Nova Scotia).

    Learn more about Glen Cove.