Something in the air
Something in the air
This sinister image of drones hovering in the distance sums up the main question of this piece: will a drone take my job?
The answer wasn鈥檛 clear cut and hasn鈥檛 got much more defined in the past year. We found many benefits of using drones 鈥 鈥淟ooking back at when I was on the slipform for Canary Wharf, using a drone instead of dangling off the 45th floor for an as-built inspection would have been much more useful, and less dangerous,鈥 said RICS land group director James Kavanagh.
Their potential to reduce the number of people worried some but Al Wessing pointed out that the economic benefits of using the technology were undeniable. 鈥滻f you are trying to understand the state of a 1 million ft2 industrial building, do you rely upon a whole team or three people who can map without a portfolio of cranes?鈥
Iain Parker, partner at Alinea Consulting, was positive: 鈥淲e do not see many (if any) surveyors becoming obsolete.鈥
Whatever the outcome, the view was that drones were here to stay. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a fad. Drones are not going to go away,鈥 concluded Kavanagh.
To read the full article from 31 March 2017, click here.
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