Find surveying equipment & supply companies within the seismic & survey services category supporting upstream, midstream, and downstream oil and gas work across North America.
At Alberta Geomatics, we provide land surveying and geomatics services around Edmonton, Sherwood Park, St. Albert, and nearby Alberta communities.
Our work includes commercial surveys, residential surveys, condominium surveys, construction services, lot grading, subdivision surveying, topographic surveys, real property reports, property line markings, easements, rights-of-way, leases, and construction layout.
For oilfield, utility, industrial, and commercial sites, survey information often has to be clear before construction, access changes, right-of-way work, or property transactions move forward. We bring professional land-surveying support, modern survey technology, and reporting for municipal, rural, commercial, and industrial properties.
For construction layout, topographic surveys, right-of-way confirmation, subdivision work, or commercial real property reports, start with the legal land description, site purpose, municipality, and required deliverable.
On heavy civil, pipeline, and inspection jobs, our Burnaby team keeps survey work tied to the field conditions that shape layout and final handoff. At Cansel Head Office, we supply surveying equipment, construction tools, and field data systems for field teams that need consistent measurements from the first stakeout to the last check.
We help clients capture, transform, and manage field data so project teams can move from site collection to finished output without losing accuracy along the way. That workflow shows up when the job depends on survey-grade tools, practical construction supplies, and technology that can stay connected across active sites.
When a project needs current equipment without the full upfront purchase, our Cansel Elite Program adds hardware-as-a-service bundles to the mix. Our Burnaby roots as a repair shop still shape how we support field teams that need dependable gear and a practical response to fast-moving field work.
Survey layout, lease marking, and construction control all depend on simple markers that arrive straight, visible, and ready for field use. Cypress Stake & Lath supplies Surveying Equipment & Supply from Southern Alberta, with premium wooden stakes and lath for oil and gas, construction, and surveying projects across North America.
Our products are made in Canada and produced from a 9,000 square foot facility in Seven Persons, near Medicine Hat. We focus on sales, logistics, and manufacturing so large field orders and smaller survey needs can move through the same supply channel.
Oil and gas projects use stakes and lath for access, boundaries, utility marking, and survey control before equipment moves on site. Construction and surveying teams use the same product family when layout accuracy and delivery timing shape the field schedule.
Cypress Stake & Lath has served this market since 1997. Our Southern Alberta shop plans stake and lath supply for survey firms, oilfield field programs, and construction projects that need Canadian-made material shipped across Canada and the United States.
A trench box, locator, or laser only helps when it matches the jobsite condition before digging starts. Mountainview Systems Ltd. works across Western Canada with construction safety and supply products from locations that include Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatoon, and Langley. We focus on shoring, locating, rental, repair, and calibration because the official source points to jobsite solutions rather than a generic supply catalog.
Trench shoring is the clearest construction-safety service. Mountainview publishes trench boxes, shoring systems, and excavation safety equipment. That equipment helps customers plan safer trench and excavation work by matching protection to ground conditions, depth, access, and crew movement. The practical value is keeping the excavation plan tied to the hazard before the job is underway.
Purchase and rental options give customers flexibility. Some contractors need equipment for repeated work and want to own the asset. Others need a trench box, laser, locator, or safety item for a defined project window. Rental availability helps reduce the burden of buying specialized gear for a short job. It also helps when the equipment need changes from project to project.
Repair and calibration services keep the tool path alive after the first purchase or rental. A laser, locating tool, or jobsite instrument only helps when it reads correctly and performs when needed. Calibration supports confidence in the measurement. Repair support can keep a tool from being discarded too early or sitting idle while a crew waits for replacement.
Western Canada coverage counts because utility and construction work often happens across multiple job areas. Mountainview's locations in Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatoon, and Langley give customers a regional supply path for trench shoring, pipe plugs, lasers, utility locators, and related site equipment. That reach can reduce the time spent finding a local source when the project moves from one city or province to another.
Contractors should start with the excavation or utility condition. Municipal and industrial site planners can use the same approach when the job depends on trench protection, locating, measurement, or calibrated tools. From there, we can connect the shoring system, locator, laser, pipe plug, rental need, repair path, or calibration requirement to the job. Mountainview Systems gives Western Canada customers a practical source for jobsite equipment that has to be ready before work starts.
Pipe plugs and utility locating tools add another layer to the construction safety story. A plug can support testing, isolation, or utility work where flow or access has to be controlled. A locator helps a crew understand what sits below or around the job area before the next cut or excavation decision. Those tools reduce uncertainty, which is often the first step in reducing jobsite risk.
The repair and calibration side also helps customers protect their existing tool investment. A laser that is out of alignment or a locator that is not reading reliably can create expensive mistakes. Calibration gives the user a clearer measurement path, while repair can return a tool to service instead of forcing a replacement purchase. For contractors that move from job to job, keeping tools checked and available can matter as much as buying the right item in the first place.
Mountainview's product range should be understood as jobsite readiness, not just sales. Shoring protects the excavation. Locators and lasers help guide the job. Rentals give short-term access to specialized gear. Repair and calibration keep existing tools dependable. When those pieces are planned together, the customer has a stronger path from project setup to safe field execution.
The first practical step is to define the jobsite hazard and the tool path. A trench may need shoring. A utility job may need locating. A grading or layout task may need a laser that has been calibrated. Starting there helps the customer choose between rental, purchase, repair, and calibration without turning the request into a loose equipment list.