14th February 2006, 02:39 PM
My experience is that the bigger and more expensive the development, the more pressure any archaeologist is put under to justify their budget/programme. However, the larger developers take a very professional and pragmatic attitude. if you can put a robust, convincing case, you are more likely to be given the necessary resources/time/etc on a big scheme. Small schemes with small developers have much smaller margins and often less professional management. They are more likely to want to circumvent the condition, trash the archaeology or otherwise behave unreasonably.
Having attended a lot of meetings with large developer clients, I am awere that they treat their architects, engineering consultants, earthworks contractors etc in the same way - pressure to justify the time/resources they ask for, usually leading to tight but reasonable agreements.
1man1desk
to let, fully furnished
Having attended a lot of meetings with large developer clients, I am awere that they treat their architects, engineering consultants, earthworks contractors etc in the same way - pressure to justify the time/resources they ask for, usually leading to tight but reasonable agreements.
1man1desk
to let, fully furnished