Utility Locating · Fraser Valley
As-Built Utility Documentation in Mission, BC
The drawings say one thing; the ground says another. We survey what was ACTUALLY installed — before backfill hides it for thirty years. Serving Mission and the Fraser Valley region with certified locators, WorkSafe BC damage-prevention practice, and written documentation — since 1999.
Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT
The BC One Call gap in Mission
BC 1 Call marks public utilities to your property line — always request it, it's free. But every service inside the line is private and stays unmarked. That gap is where most utility strikes happen, and liability lands on whoever dug. This service closes the gap.
Locating conditions in Mission
Ground: Mission sits on steep till and bedrock benches above Fraser floodplain. Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable.
What's buried here: Hillside homes with long gravity-fed service runs, heritage downtown, and floodplain industry.
Common as-built utility documentation work in Mission
- Hillside service line leak tracing
- Industrial flat utility mapping
- Heritage-area locates
- New construction utility records
- Renovation closeout documentation
- Strata and facility records
How the Mission locate works
- 1
Capture open trenches
The cheapest as-built is the one recorded before backfill — we survey installed services in the open trench when scheduling allows.
- 2
Verify after cover
Where backfill beat us to it, GPR + EM verify the installed routes against the design drawings.
- 3
Flag the deviations
Every divergence between design and installation is documented — the differences are precisely what future crews need to know.
- 4
Issue the record
Layered CAD as-built plus PDF atlas; the property's permanent subsurface memory.
How to read the marks we leave
CSA/APWA uniform colour code. Standard practice: mechanical digging stays 60 cm clear of any mark; the last hand-width is exposed by hand or hydrovac.
Mission questions, answered
The contractor gave us as-builts. Why verify?
Construction as-builts are routinely red-lined design drawings, not measurements — field changes, unmarked reroutes, and 'close enough' drafting accumulate. Independent verification catches the deviations before they become the next decade's mystery strikes. We find meaningful divergence on the majority of sites we check.
When is the best time to capture as-builts?
Open-trench, before backfill — survey-grade positions at minimal cost. Second best is immediately post-construction while installers remember the routes. The most expensive time is fifteen years later, which is when most owners call.
What goes into the final record?
Routes, depths, materials, junctions, valves, and access points — layered by utility in CAD, attributed with capture method and confidence, plus a readable PDF atlas. Facility managers use the atlas; engineers use the CAD.
Can you build as-builts for an old building with nothing on file?
Yes — that's reconstructive mapping: GPR + EM + sonde tracing assemble the record from the ground itself. It's the same service as utility mapping, deliberately formatted as the as-built the building never had.
Does BC One Call cover my Mission property?
Only partially. BC 1 Call marks registered public utilities up to your property line — free, and you should always use it. Everything inside the line is private and unmarked: irrigation, gas runs to outbuildings, landscape lighting, old septic, abandoned services. Mission's stock — hillside homes with long gravity-fed service runs, heritage downtown, and floodplain industry. — is exactly where those private surprises accumulate. Private locating closes that gap before you dig.
How do Mission ground conditions affect the locate?
Mission sits on steep till and bedrock benches above Fraser floodplain. Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable. Where local conditions limit one technology, the survey leans on the others — EM tracing, sonde work, and acoustic methods — so the locate objective is met regardless of soil.
How quickly can you do a locate in Mission?
Mission is inside our standing Fraser Valley coverage — typical scheduling is 24–72 hours, with same-day service often possible during business hours (Mon–Sat, 8am–6pm Pacific). Pricing follows our province-wide structure with no regional premium; the free phone consult produces a firm number in about five minutes: 604-239-9934.
Related locating services in Mission
Utility Mapping Services in Mission
One locate marks the ground for a week. A utility map documents the property for decades — layered CAD/GIS deliverables of everything beneath your site.
View serviceSubsurface Utility Engineering (SUE) in Mission
ASCE 38 quality-level utility investigation for engineers and capital projects — from records research (QL-D) to surveyed, daylighted certainty (QL-A).
View servicePrivate Utility Locating in Mission
BC One Call stops at the property line. We locate everything inside it — water, gas, power, comms, irrigation, septic, and the abandoned lines nobody remembers — before anyone digs.
View serviceTelecommunications Infrastructure Mapping in Mission
Copper, coax, fibre, and the conduit packs that carry them — campus and corridor comms plant mapped end to end, vault to vault.
View service← All about as-built utility documentation·Utility locating hub·GPR utility locating in Mission
As-Built Utility Documentation near Mission
Digging soon in Mission?
Free phone consult with a certified locator — scope, price, and schedule in five minutes. No pressure, and we'll tell you if One Call alone covers your situation.