Dear All,
We have a project which is located in a historic district and it is required by the local authority that before the start of construction, archaeological works have to be undertaken together with removal of a few trees. Archaeologists will have to do some small excavations to verify if there isn't anything of archealogical value that should be preserved. This has to be done by an independent company not related to the general contractor before the start of any construction works. Moreover, these archeological works have to be organized by a company from which the Investor bought the site - it means that this is not a responsibility of the Investor. Does anybody know if this phase - archealogical research and removal of some trees should be included in this prerequisite and the Erosion and Sedimentation Control Plan?
Emily Purcell
Sustainable Design LeadCannonDesign
LEEDuser Expert
371 thumbs up
November 30, 2022 - 9:45 am
This can be excluded as it is done outside the scope of the LEED project and not carried out by the owner.
In general for other archaeological digs I think the same logic would apply - it is not part of the construction work but a third-party activity. And, archaeology work would have its own standards and practices for stabilizing the site, unlike the CGP standards which are written for construction.