Heritage & conservation.
Heritage assets have to be recorded without touching the fabric, and visitor sites carry an access duty. We document condition, support conservation and consent, and provide access evidence where scaffold is intrusive or not permitted.
Evidence
without
contact.
On a listed or heritage asset, the survey method matters as much as the survey. Scaffold is intrusive, costly and sometimes refused, and contact with fragile fabric is a risk in itself. Drone and 360 capture records condition, decoration and structure without a hand on the building.
The same capture supports conservation planning, statutory consent and insurance reinstatement, and a photogrammetric mesh gives a permanent, measurable record of an asset before it changes. For visitor sites, an accessible 360 survey doubles as Equality Act evidence and a pre-visit guide.
Where it pays
off for heritage
owners.
Plain-language applications for trusts, estates, conservation architects and visitor attractions. Every one records the asset without a hand on the fabric.
Listed-building condition surveys
Roofs, spires, towers and high-level masonry recorded from the air, so condition is documented without scaffold or contact with fragile fabric.
Conservation-sensitive capture
Facade and roof capture planned around the asset, its setting and any wildlife or access constraints, to a conservation-grade method.
Photogrammetric 3D & HBIM
A measurable 3D mesh and model, a permanent record of the asset as it is now, for archive, overlay and conservation planning.
Orthophoto elevations
Comparison-grade elevations that let conservators measure and track change between visits and after intervention.
Immersive disability access surveys
Accessible 360 access evidence for visitor sites, aligned to the Equality Act 2010, that doubles as a pre-visit guide.
360 visitor tours
Navigable tours for interpretation, pre-visit information and the asset record.
No scaffold,
no contact,
a record kept.
What this changes for a heritage owner, in practical terms.
No contact with the fabric
Condition recorded without a hand on fragile stone, render or decoration.
No scaffold needed
High-level capture where scaffold is intrusive, costly or simply not permitted.
A permanent record
A measurable 3D archive of the asset as it stands, before it changes or after an intervention.
Supports consent & insurance
Evidence for listed-building consent, conservation planning and reinstatement after loss.
Access and interpretation
One accessible 360 survey serves both the Equality Act duty and the visitor experience.
Conservation-grade method
Capture planned around the asset, its setting and any constraints, not a generic flight.
What you
receive.
A non-contact record and access evidence for heritage assets.
Heritage condition report
Geo-tagged, timestamped record to a conservation-grade methodology.
3D mesh and elevations
Photogrammetric mesh and orthophoto elevations for record and overlay.
360 visitor tour
A navigable tour for pre-visit information and the asset record.
Access report
Accessible access evidence aligned to the Equality Act 2010.
Heritage owner
questions.
More in the FAQ hub.
Yes. That is the point. Drone and 360 capture record roofs, spires, towers and high-level masonry from the air, with no scaffold and no contact with fragile fabric, which is often the only acceptable method on a listed asset.
Yes. The capture supports conservation planning, statutory consent applications and insurance reinstatement, giving a dated, measurable record of the asset before and after any intervention.
Yes. A photogrammetric mesh and model give a measurable 3D archive of the asset as it stands now, suitable for HBIM, overlay and comparison against future surveys.
Yes. For visitor attractions an accessible 360 access survey doubles as Equality Act 2010 evidence and a pre-visit guide, built to be accessible itself rather than an inaccessible report.

