Lead Building Surveyor

Cathedrals
4 days ago
Create job alert

ALink Recruitment and working alongside a consultancy that are expanding their Inspection Division with the creation of a new Building Survey Lead role — a highly technical, highly creative individual responsible for shaping and scaling our building-survey capability. This is not a traditional measured-building survey post. We’re looking for someone from a conditional surveying / structural investigation background who understands how to assess, diagnose, and communicate the condition of complex assets across the built environment.

This role will sit at the heart of our rapidly growing inspection offering, working closely with both Operations and Commercial teams to build a market-leading service line, define our products, communicate our technical capabilities, and help identify strategic opportunities across multiple sectors.

Key Responsibilities

Operational Leadership

  • Lead and develop the Building Survey team, setting technical standards, workflows, and QA processes.

  • Work closely with the Operations Team to build scalable operational capacity, ensuring consistent delivery across multiple asset types.

  • Scope, plan and oversee complex building condition and structural investigation surveys, including identification of specialist subcontractors where required.

  • Act as the senior technical authority for building pathology, material defects, and structural issues encountered across commercial, residential, heritage, industrial and infrastructure assets.

  • Develop best-practice methodologies blending traditional surveying approaches with advanced inspection technologies (drone, LiDAR, thermography, digital twins etc.).

    Commercial Development & Product Definition

  • Collaborate with the Commercial Team to define and articulate new inspection products for the market.

  • Support business development activity by translating technical capability into clear client value propositions.

  • Help identify strategic target clients and sectors, advising where our technical strengths can create commercial advantage.

  • Assist in bid writing, fee development, and technical proposal inputs for major tenders and frameworks.

    Technical Delivery

  • Undertake and oversee condition surveys, structural defect investigations, intrusive and non-intrusive testing, and envelope diagnostics across a wide range of asset types.

  • Ensure survey outputs (reports, drawings, models, thermal analysis, photogrammetry etc.) meet high technical accuracy and clarity standards.

  • Provide senior-level technical review and signoff for all deliverables produced by the team.

    Team Development & Scaling

  • Mentor, train and upskill surveyors into a high-performing, scalable specialist team.

  • Support recruitment and onboarding of new team members as the division grows.

  • Create a culture of quality, innovation and continuous improvement within the team.

    Skills & Experience Required

    Technical Background

  • Degree in Building Surveying, Structural Engineering, Building Pathology, Construction Technology, or similar.

  • Chartered or working towards chartership (RICS, CIOB, IStructE, CABE etc.).

  • Strong background in condition surveys, building pathology, structural investigation, defect diagnosis, and working with specialist testing contractors.

  • Experience across a range of asset types: commercial, residential, industrial, heritage, infrastructure or utilities.

  • Strong understanding of building regulations, construction methods, structural systems and envelope performance.

    Leadership & Commercial Capability

  • Demonstrable experience leading technical teams or acting as a senior technical authority.

  • Confident in commercial discussions, defining scope, assisting with fee development and supporting business development activity.

  • Ability to communicate complex technical concepts to clients in clear, business-friendly language.

    Desired (Not Essential)

  • Experience integrating survey outputs with digital inspection technologies (drones, SLAM, LiDAR, thermography etc.).

  • Strong report-writing and visual communication skills.

  • Experience working with major contractors, property owners, asset managers or heritage estates.

    Personal Attributes

  • Highly creative technical thinker with an ability to turn capability into a product.

  • Collaborative, approachable and comfortable working across Commercial, Ops and Delivery teams.

  • Flexible mindset suited to a role that spans multiple asset types and survey methodologies.

  • Passion for building and scaling a new specialist capability within a fast-growing division.

    Why Join?

    You’ll be joining at a pivotal point in the growth of the Inspection Division, with the opportunity to shape a new team, influence our service lines, and help define how building inspection is delivered in a digital, technology-enabled future. This is a senior role with real impact, autonomy and long-term growth potential

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Lead UAS Navigation Engineer (SC Cleared)

Sensor Fusion Software Lead

Workplace Manager London HQ

Head of Engineering

Firmware Engineer

Strategic Account Executive - National

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How Many UAV Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a UAV Job?

If you’re aiming for a role in the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry, it can feel like every job advert expects you to know a never-ending list of tools: flight control systems, autopilot frameworks, simulation platforms, sensor suites, communication stacks, mission planning software, GIS tools — and on it goes. With so many names and acronyms, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed and assume you must learn every tool under the sun before you’ll be taken seriously by employers. Here’s the honest truth most UAV hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can use the right tools to solve real UAV problems safely, reliably and in context. Tools matter — absolutely — but they always serve a purpose: solving problems, reducing risk, improving performance, or guiding safer operations. So the real question isn’t how many tools you should know — it’s: which tools you should master, in what context, and why. This article breaks down what employers actually expect, which tools are essential, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so you look credible, confident and job-ready.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in UAV Job Applications (UK Guide)

Whether you’re aiming for roles in UAV design, robotics/controls engineering, autonomy & computer vision, flight test & certification, embedded systems, operations, ground control software, systems integration or regulatory compliance, the way you present yourself in an application can make or break your chances — and that often happens before the hiring manager reads past your first few lines. In the UK UAV/jobs market, recruiters and hiring managers scan applications rapidly. They look for relevant experience, measurable delivery, technical credibility, domain awareness and safety/regulatory understanding — often making a decision within the first 10–20 seconds. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in UAV applications, why those signals matter, and how to structure your CV, portfolio and cover letter so you get noticed — not filtered out.

The Skills Gap in UAV Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) — commonly known as drones — are among the fastest-growing technologies globally. From infrastructure inspection and agriculture to emergency response, surveying, logistics and defence, UAVs are transforming how organisations gather data, deliver services and improve efficiency. In the UK, demand for UAV professionals is increasing rapidly. Yet despite a growing number of graduates with engineering, robotics or aerospace backgrounds, employers continue to report a persistent problem: Many graduates are not ready for real UAV jobs. This is not a reflection of intelligence or academic effort. It is a widening skills gap between what universities teach and what employers actually need in the UAV sector. This article explores that gap in depth — what universities do well, where programmes fall short, why the divide exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the gap to build a successful career in UAVs.