Welcome

The JTS Partnership LLP is a multi-disciplinary planning and surveying practice, with offices in Brentwood, Leeds and Canterbury. The JTS Partnership provides a comprehensive and innovative range of professional services using the latest information technology, quality-assured management systems and has a wide range of technical experience and expertise. As a result, we receive many repeat instructions and have built up a number of long-term, mutually beneficial client relationships.

The JTS Partnership work throughout the United Kingdom for a wide range of clients, from private individuals and householders, to major developers and national companies. Our planners and surveyors pride themselves on their professionalism and the effectiveness of the service that they provide. Our aim is to identify and satisfy client requirements in a cost-effective and timely manner.

Find out more about the range of services we provide:

The JTS Partnership is regulated by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS).

  • Winter 2010

  • The JTS Partnership is pleased to be appointed to carry out an appraisal of the buildings at a major college
    campus in London.
  • The JTS Partnership has just secured the discharge of the first of 14 reserved matters and condition applications
    that have been submitted for a mixed use business park, residential, student accommodation, leisure, retail and hotel
    development on the edge of Colchester. The scheme, which is a joint venture between Essex University and
    Carisbrooke Investments, is due to start on site in Spring 2010.
  • The JTS Partnership has secured planning permission, at appeal, for a replacement building in Loughton, Essex.
    The proposal had been refused permission by the local planning authority as being out of scale with the character
    and appearance of the area and due to its impact on adjacent properties.
  • The JTS Partnership expects to shortly receive permission at appeal for a specialist waste recycling centre in
    the London Borough of Sutton. The Borough Council withdrew its evidence just before the Public Inquiry was
    due to start, accepting that it had made the wrong decision.