Engineering Surveyor

J Murphy & Sons
Amersham on the Hill, Buckinghamshire, HP6 6LD, United Kingdom
2 months ago
Posted
30 Mar 2026 (2 months ago)

Murphy is a leading international, specialist engineering and construction company founded in 1951 with a purpose to improve life by delivering world-class infrastructure. Operating in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada and America, Murphy provides better engineered solutions to infrastructure sectors including transportation; natural resources; energy and water.

Headquartered in London, Murphy has a number of related businesses – Ground Engineering; Utility Connections; Murphy Plant; Murphy Process Engineering; Pipeline Testing Services; Specialist Welding Services; and Electrical Services. Murphy is a specialist in delivering pipelines, design, structural steel, tunnelling, fabrication, bridges and piling, and has a substantial holding of plant, equipment and facilities.

Murphy employs around 4,000 engineers, professional managers and skilled operatives around the world. Together, they work as ‘One Murphy’ - directly delivering the people, plant and expertise needed to make projects a success. Visit (url removed) or follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram and X:

#MoretoMurphy

A day in the life of a Murphy UAS Remote Pilot Surveyor

You will support our projects nationwide, delivering high quality aerial survey data and integrating it seamlessly into our digital engineering processes. Your day may include:

Plan and deliver UAS aerial surveys (photogrammetry and LiDAR), including GSD/point density definition, flight planning and field operations.

Conduct airspace assessments, hazard analysis, and prepare RAMS and emergency procedures compliant with CAP722 and UK UAS regulations.

Deploy and survey RTK/Network RTK GCPs and independent check points to ensure survey grade accuracy.

Execute PPK/RTK positioning workflows, including trajectory processing and validation.

Operate UAS platforms with RGB and LiDAR payloads and configure all sensor settings to meet survey specifications.

Process photogrammetry and LiDAR datasets to generate orthomosaics, DSM/DTM, classified point clouds and volumetric surfaces.

Perform detailed quality control on imagery, GNSS data, point clouds and surface models to ensure compliance with project specifications.

Support data delivery and hosting through Propeller, ArcGIS Online, or project-specific platforms. And importantly…

You will play a key part in integrating UAS outputs into our digital engineering and machine control workflows, including learning how:

UAS surfaces feed into earthworks models and cut/fill analysis.

Survey data is converted into machine control-ready datasets (e.g., for dozers, excavators, and intelligent compaction).

Digital terrain and point cloud data support progress reporting, construction verification, and automated digital workflows.

We are specifically looking for someone motivated to expand beyond flying and processing, and who wants to become a specialist in digital data processing, modelling and automation across the full Geomatics lifecycle

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Engineering Delivery Manager

Holt Executive West Sussex, United Kingdom

Director of Software Engineering

Spire Glasgow, Alba / Scotland, G2 1AL, United Kingdom

Aerospace Senior Engineering Manager

ReeVR Talent Frimley Green, Surrey, GU16 6LD, United Kingdom
£80,000 – £100,000 pa Hybrid

Quality Inspector (Aerospace/Precision Engineering)

Ernest Gordon Recruitment Basildon, Essex, United Kingdom
£35,000 – £36,000 pa On-site

Capability Manager (Mechanical Engineering)

Rolls Royce Bristol, United Kingdom
Hybrid Clearance Required

Software Engineer - Engineering Process Assurance

Rolls Royce United Kingdom
Hybrid Clearance Required

Industry Insights

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

Where to Advertise Space Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Where to advertise space jobs UK in 2026: the specialist boards, agency channels and community routes that reach satellite, propulsion and launch talent. The candidate pool spans satellite engineers, propulsion specialists, mission analysts, ground segment software developers, space systems architects and commercial space professionals — a highly specific multidisciplinary community that general job boards are poorly equipped to reach. The strongest space candidates are often embedded in ESA programmes, academic research groups, UK Space Agency-funded projects or established primes, and move between roles through sector-specific networks, industry bodies and conference communities rather than mainstream platforms. This guide, published by UKSpaceJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise space industry roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

Space Jobs UK 2026: What to Expect Over the Next 3 Years

Space Jobs UK 2026: roles, salaries and the UK space sector hiring trends shaping satellites, launch, Earth observation and space data careers. The UK space sector is in the middle of something that feels genuinely historic. A combination of government commitment, private capital, and technological progress has transformed Britain's position in the global space economy from a capable but secondary player into a nation with serious sovereign ambitions — and a jobs market that is expanding to match them. This is not the space industry of previous generations, defined by a small number of government agencies, a handful of prime contractors, and career pathways accessible only to a narrow band of elite engineers and scientists. The new space economy is broader, faster-moving, and more commercially driven than anything the sector has previously seen. Satellite manufacturing has been democratised by small sat technology. Launch is becoming domestic. Space data is flowing into applications across agriculture, insurance, climate monitoring, maritime, and defence at a scale that is creating entirely new categories of commercial hiring. And the defence and national security dimensions of space have elevated the sector's strategic importance to a degree that is driving sustained public investment in the talent pipeline. For job seekers, the UK space jobs market of 2026 represents an opportunity that is both more accessible and more technically demanding than at any previous point. The candidates who will thrive over the next three years are those who understand where the sector is heading — which programmes are moving from development into operation, which technologies are defining the architecture of modern space systems, and how the definition of a space career is expanding well beyond the spacecraft engineering core toward a much wider ecosystem of roles across the full space value chain. This article breaks down what the UK space jobs market is likely to look like through to 2028 — covering the titles emerging right now, the technologies driving employer demand, the skills that will matter most, and how to position your career at the leading edge of one of the most exciting sectors in the UK economy.