Before you acquire a property, understand its engineering constraints and opportunities. Our rapid feasibility assessments give developers the intelligence needed to negotiate, acquire, or move on with confidence.
Land acquisition is one of the largest financial commitments a developer makes, yet engineering feasibility is often left until after closing. This approach creates risk: a site that looks ideal from a market perspective might have engineering constraints that dramatically reduce density, increase costs, or extend timelines to entitlement approval.
Hagen Engineering provides rapid, comprehensive site feasibility analysis during the pre-acquisition phase. Our engineers evaluate your prospective site against local zoning, regulatory requirements, utility capacity, topographic constraints, and environmental conditions — then deliver a clear assessment of what the site can realistically support and what the path to approval looks like.
Whether you're a regional developer exploring new markets or a national firm entering the Southeast for the first time, our feasibility analysis gives you the information you need to make confident acquisition decisions and avoid costly surprises after closing.
The first question developers ask is simple: "How many units (or square feet) can this site accommodate?" Getting that answer right requires more than just dividing acreage by density minimums. It requires understanding the actual buildable area after accounting for topography, environmental constraints, utility corridors, and local design standards.
We conduct a rapid preliminary layout analysis that shows a realistic development yield for your site. This isn't a formal site plan — it's a conceptual evaluation that accounts for:
This preliminary analysis often reveals that a site's theoretical density is significantly higher or lower than the practical yield after engineering and regulatory requirements. Getting this assessment before acquisition prevents costly post-closing surprises and strengthens your negotiating position.
We conduct a thorough review of applicable zoning ordinances to confirm your intended use is permitted, identify required variances or special permits, and document the development and design standards that will govern your project. This includes:
In many cases, we identify zoning constraints that require variance relief or use modifications. We assess the feasibility and typical timeline for obtaining relief, so you can factor this into your acquisition timeline and financial projections.
Water, sewer, and stormwater infrastructure are fundamental to any development. A site with excellent zoning but inadequate utility service is significantly less valuable. During feasibility analysis, we assess:
We reach out directly to utility authorities to confirm service availability, discuss capacity, and understand any requirements for system upgrades. For developments in areas with capacity constraints, we assess alternatives and feasibility timelines.
Site topography dramatically affects development feasibility, cost, and timeline. Steep slopes increase grading costs and often preclude building. Flat sites require significant stormwater management. Undulating terrain can be ideal or problematic depending on how the site is laid out.
We review topographic information (available LiDAR, existing surveys, or available mapping) to assess slope constraints, identify potential building pads, evaluate grading costs, and determine if the site's relief supports your proposed use. For sites with significant slopes, we evaluate the feasibility and cost of remedial grading or foundation solutions.
Slope analysis is critical for understanding stormwater management feasibility as well. Steep slopes can make detention pond design challenging; flat sites make achieving adequate outfall elevation difficult. We assess how the site's topography will influence stormwater system design and costs.
Environmental constraints are among the most significant factors affecting site development feasibility. We conduct a preliminary environmental screening based on available mapping and databases to identify potential wetlands, streams, floodplain areas, and other environmental features that might be present on the site.
This screening is not a substitute for a full wetland delineation or environmental assessment (those come later in the process), but it provides early warning of potential environmental issues and helps us advise you on whether formal environmental studies are warranted before acquisition.
We assess:
We make recommendations about whether formal environmental studies should be conducted before closing and help you understand potential impacts on development feasibility and timeline.
The path from land acquisition to permit approval varies dramatically depending on local jurisdiction, project complexity, and market conditions. We provide realistic timeline estimates for your specific project, accounting for:
We also provide preliminary cost estimates for design and entitlement services based on our experience in the specific jurisdiction and market. These estimates help you understand the full financial picture of acquisition, design, and permitting before you close on the property.
We understand that acquisition deadlines are tight. Land deal timelines often compress as closing approaches, and you need feasibility analysis quickly to support acquisition decisions. We're organized to provide rapid-turnaround studies that deliver the information you need within 5-10 business days in most cases.
Our approach combines desktop analysis (zoning research, utility coordination, environmental screening) with limited site field work to develop a credible, actionable feasibility assessment without the extended timeline of a full design study.
If you proceed with acquisition after our feasibility study, those same engineers who evaluated the site become your design team during the next phases. There's no learning curve, no re-evaluation of options — we move seamlessly from feasibility analysis through preliminary design, agency coordination, and final permitting. This continuity of engineer team and institutional knowledge accelerates the entire timeline to permit approval.
Hagen Engineering's site feasibility service combines engineering rigor with practical market experience. We've guided hundreds of developers through acquisition decisions across the Southeast. If you're evaluating a site and need engineering clarity to support your decision, let's talk about what's realistic and what the path to development looks like.
Tell us about your prospective acquisition and we'll provide a rapid feasibility assessment to support your acquisition decision. Clear answers. No surprises.