Chartered structural engineers, detailed reports








Granite walls in Old Aberdeen can hide movement that is not obvious at street level. Our structural engineers regularly inspect properties across Ferryhill, Rosemount & Golden Square, Union Street, Cults, and the wider Aberdeen City Council area, where older granite buildings, tenements, and post-war homes each behave differently under load. Aberdeen is known as the Granite City for good reason, but the ground beneath it is more varied than the stonework above it. Granite bedrock is stable, while glacial till, sands, and gravels can create localised foundation concerns that need a closer look.
A structural survey becomes relevant when cracks widen, floors slope, doors start to bind, or an extension has altered the way loads transfer through a property. Our team of chartered structural engineers (CEng, MIStructE) looks beyond surface symptoms and checks the path from roof to foundation, including lintels, load-bearing walls, floor joists, and signs of movement. That matters in Aberdeen, where solid granite walls, lime mortar, and timber suspended floors are common in pre-1945 homes, while modern schemes in Countesswells, Grandhome, Hazelwood on Countesswells Road, and Den of Pitfodels in Cults use different construction details. We assess the structure, explain the cause, and set out practical next steps.

records £316,929
Detached Homes
records £206,786
Semi-detached Homes
records £165,193
Terraced Homes
records £125,500
Flats
3,741
12-Month Sales
44.2%
Flats, maisonettes or apartments
18.2%
Detached houses
17.6%
Semi-detached houses
16.9%
Terraced houses
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
A structural survey looks at the parts of the building that carry and distribute loads. In Aberdeen, that often means checking thick granite walls in Old Aberdeen, lintels above openings, suspended timber floors, roof timbers, and how the foundation sits in the ground at Ferryhill or Rosemount & Golden Square. We look for movement patterns that point to settlement, heave, lateral movement, or a defect in a repair. Damp can also be structural in origin when water ingress is linked to failed pointing, defective flashings, or cracking around openings.
The inspection goes beyond a visual glance at the crack itself. We assess whether the issue is tied to a load path problem, thermal movement, poor past alterations, or deterioration in masonry and mortar. Aberdeen’s older homes often have solid granite walls with lime mortar, sash and case windows, and slate roofs, while newer homes in AB15 and AB22 may have brick, render, or modern cladding systems. Each construction type produces different symptoms, so the survey has to match the building, not a generic checklist.

Aberdeen’s ground conditions matter as much as the building type. Granite bedrock dominates the area, yet superficial deposits of boulder clay, sands, and gravels can sit above it, and clay-rich pockets carry a moderate shrink-swell risk during very wet or very dry weather. That can affect shallow foundations, particularly where older houses in Cults, Old Aberdeen, or around the city centre were built before modern ground investigation became routine. New-build areas such as Countesswells and Grandhome sit on planned estates, but even modern homes can show movement if drainage, tree planting, or ground preparation is poorly handled.
Flooding adds another layer of risk. The River Dee and River Don can affect low-lying locations, while coastal flooding remains a concern in a city exposed to storm surges and high tides. Surface water flooding is also relevant in parts of the city centre, where impermeable surfaces and overloaded drainage can leave water sitting against walls and sub-floor voids. Once moisture enters a structure, it can accelerate mortar failure, timber decay, and localised ground softening near foundations, so the survey has to consider both the building and the setting around it.
Older construction methods are important here because Aberdeen has a large stock of pre-1919 and inter-war homes. Solid granite walls, lime mortar joints, timber suspended floors, slate roofs, and sash and case windows are still common in the city centre and conservation areas such as Old Aberdeen, Ferryhill, Bon Accord & St Nicholas, Rosemount & Golden Square, and Union Street. A failure in pointing or a blocked gutter on one of these buildings can show up as damp staining, internal plaster cracking, or spalling granite. We inspect those details carefully because the apparent defect is not always the root cause.
Diagonal cracking above windows, stepped cracking through masonry, or a horizontal crack that tracks along a wall line can all justify a closer inspection. In Aberdeen, those patterns often show up in granite properties where mortar joints have weathered, or in post-war housing where movement has affected cavity walls and rendered finishes. Doors that stick, window frames that jam, and floors that feel uneven are also worth checking, especially after heavy rain near the River Dee or after a prolonged dry spell on clay-influenced ground.
Alterations matter too. A removed internal wall, a new opening, an added loft conversion, or an extension in a terrace or semi-detached house can change how loads are carried. In Countesswells, Hazelwood on AB15 8LX, or Den of Pitfodels in AB15 9PL, recent homes are not immune from poor detailing around openings, roof junctions, or drainage runs. We look for the combination of symptoms, not just one defect, because structural problems often build slowly before they become obvious.

We start with the issue you have seen, such as stepped cracking in Old Aberdeen, sticking doors in Ferryhill, or movement after work in Cults. That lets us focus the inspection and decide whether a structural survey is the right level of assessment.
Our structural engineers usually spend 2-3 hours on site, depending on the severity of the defect and the complexity of the building. We inspect accessible roof spaces, floors, walls, openings, and external ground levels, then record crack widths, levels, and visible signs of distortion.
We measure movement, check load-bearing elements, and compare what we see with the construction type. In Aberdeen, that often means distinguishing between solid granite walls, cavity wall construction, and timber frame or blockwork in newer developments such as Grandhome or Hazelwood.
If the issue needs more than a visual diagnosis, our team can produce calculations and specifications for remedial works. That may include wall strengthening, lintel replacement, drainage changes, or a repair strategy for foundations and masonry.
We usually issue the written report within 5-10 working days. The report sets out the likely cause, the level of urgency, the risk of further movement, and the practical next steps in plain English.
Once you have the report, we can talk through the findings and the repair options. That is especially helpful where subsidence, movement, or previous alterations make the route forward less straightforward.
Not every crack points to structural failure. Hairline cracks can form through drying shrinkage, plaster movement, or thermal expansion, especially in newer homes around Countesswells, Grandhome, and other post-1980 developments. Moderate cracks deserve more attention if they widen over time, step through masonry, or appear alongside distortion in floors or openings. Severe cracking, bowing walls, or sudden changes in level need prompt inspection because they may indicate active movement rather than a historic defect.
Seasonal movement is common on clay-influenced ground, and Aberdeen’s glacial till can respond to changes in moisture. A property near mature trees may move slightly in dry weather if roots draw moisture from the soil, then settle back when rainfall returns. That pattern can appear in parts of Cults, Old Aberdeen, or along lower-lying streets near the River Don and River Dee. Progressive subsidence behaves differently, because the symptoms keep getting worse and the crack pattern tends to develop in a consistent direction.
Monitoring is often the right next step when the movement is unclear or the building is stable enough to watch. Insurers usually want a 12-month monitoring record before agreeing remediation on a subsidence claim, and that timescale helps separate temporary seasonal change from a genuine ground problem. If the survey shows that the crack is linked to failed pointing, a leaking drain, or a recent alteration, the fix may be localised rather than major. We set out that distinction clearly so owners in Aberdeen can act on the evidence, not guesswork.
Foundation behaviour in Aberdeen depends on the ground below and the age of the house above. Older granite properties in the city centre often sit on traditional shallow foundations, while many mid-century homes use cavity wall construction with stripped-back detailing that can be vulnerable if drainage or ground support changes. Granite bedrock itself is stable, but superficial clay pockets can shrink and swell, and tree roots near foundations can intensify the movement. That is why we look closely at soil conditions around Old Aberdeen, Ferryhill, and the conservation areas around Union Street.
Aberdeen has no significant coal mining legacy directly beneath the city, but historical quarrying for granite can still matter if old voids, filled ground, or poorly documented local groundworks are present. The risk is not identical across the city, so a structural survey needs to read the site carefully, especially near sloping ground, older extensions, or homes affected by River Dee and coastal flooding. In newer areas such as AB15 and AB22, we also review whether drainage, service trenches, and plot preparation have created local settlement zones. Insurance decisions often depend on that diagnosis, so a precise report helps when claims are being assessed.

A structural survey is appropriate when you can see movement, such as diagonal cracking, stepped masonry cracks, bulging walls, sloping floors, or doors and windows that no longer fit properly. We also recommend one after major alterations, after flooding, or when a surveyor has flagged a structural concern in a granite property in Old Aberdeen, Ferryhill, or Cults. If the building has a history of patch repairs, poor pointing, or previous underpinning, a structural engineer’s assessment is often the right next step.
A structural survey is a focused engineering inspection carried out by chartered structural engineers. It concentrates on movement, foundations, load-bearing walls, roof structure, and remedial options, while a building survey is broader and looks at the overall condition of the property. In Aberdeen, that difference matters where a granite tenement or altered terrace has a specific defect that needs diagnosis rather than a general commentary.
Our structural surveys start from £500. The final fee depends on property size, access, the complexity of the issue, and whether we need extra investigation in places such as loft spaces, sub-floor areas, or retained walls. A straightforward inspection in a flat in the city centre will usually be simpler than a detailed assessment of a larger detached home in Den of Pitfodels or a property with historic movement in Old Aberdeen.
The site visit usually takes 2-3 hours, depending on the severity of the defect and the size of the property. Older granite homes, listed buildings, or homes with hard-to-access roof spaces can take longer because we need to check more structural elements. The written report normally follows within 5-10 working days.
Yes. We assess whether the movement is consistent with subsidence, settlement, heave, or seasonal ground change, and we look for the clues that separate one from another. In Aberdeen, that includes checking the effect of clay pockets, nearby trees, drainage leaks, and any history of flooding near the River Dee or River Don. If the evidence points to active ground movement, we can advise on monitoring, calculations, and repair options.
Insurance cover depends on the cause of the defect. Sudden damage from a storm or escape of water may be treated differently from long-term settlement, wear, or poor maintenance, and many policies ask for an engineer’s report before they make a decision. For subsidence claims, insurers often want monitoring over 12 months before they approve remediation, so our findings can be important in that process.
They can do. Homes in Countesswells, Grandhome, Hazelwood, and Den of Pitfodels may have modern materials, but they still rely on correct ground preparation, drainage, and load transfer. If there are cracks, settlement around extensions, or concerns about a recent alteration, a structural survey can identify whether the issue is cosmetic or structural.
Yes. Where the defect needs more than a diagnosis, our structural engineers can provide calculations and specifications for remedial works. That might cover lintel replacement, local wall strengthening, drainage changes, crack stitching, or a foundation repair strategy. The report is written so builders and insurers can see what needs to happen next.
From £350
Homebuyer report for conventional homes with fewer visible defects
From £600
Full building survey for older, altered, or larger homes
From £60
Energy performance certificate for sale or let
From £0
Speak with a mortgage broker about lending and affordability
Our structural surveys start from £500, with the final fee set by the scale of the issue and the access needed to inspect it properly. A flat in the city centre with one crack line will be cheaper to assess than a granite villa in Old Aberdeen with roof, wall, and floor movement to investigate. Size matters, but so does complexity. If we need to examine a sub-floor void, a rear extension, a retaining wall, or drainage around the perimeter, the cost rises because the inspection takes longer.
The biggest price drivers are the severity of the problem, the property type, and how much of the structure we can see on the day. A semi-detached house in AB15 or a terrace in Ferryhill may need a focused review, while a detached home in Cults or a listed building in Bon Accord & St Nicholas can need more time, more measurement, and a deeper report. Properties with suspected subsidence also tend to require more analysis because we may need to distinguish between historic and active movement. That extra diagnosis is what makes the report useful, rather than just descriptive.
The report normally includes the cause of the concern, the risk of further movement, and our recommended repairs or monitoring steps. Where needed, we can add calculations and specifications so builders know what is required and insurers have a technical basis for the claim. Turnaround is usually 5-10 working days after the site visit, although complex properties can take longer if we need to review drawings, historic alterations, or previous repair records. For Aberdeen homeowners and buyers, that timing gives a clear route from concern to decision.
Structural Survey In London

Structural Survey In Plymouth

Structural Survey In Liverpool

Structural Survey In Glasgow

Structural Survey In Sheffield

Structural Survey In Edinburgh

Structural Survey In Coventry

Structural Survey In Bradford

Structural Survey In Manchester

Structural Survey In Birmingham

Structural Survey In Bristol

Structural Survey In Oxford

Structural Survey In Leicester

Structural Survey In Newcastle

Structural Survey In Leeds

Structural Survey In Southampton

Structural Survey In Cardiff

Structural Survey In Nottingham

Structural Survey In Norwich

Structural Survey In Brighton

Structural Survey In Derby

Structural Survey In Portsmouth

Structural Survey In Northampton

Structural Survey In Milton Keynes

Structural Survey In Bournemouth

Structural Survey In Bolton

Structural Survey In Swansea

Structural Survey In Swindon

Structural Survey In Peterborough

Structural Survey In Wolverhampton

Chartered structural engineers, detailed reports
Get A Quote & BookMost surveyors take 1-2 days to quote.
We'll price your survey in seconds.
Most surveyors take 1-2 days to quote.
We'll price your survey in seconds.





Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.