Search Acumen enhances commercial property platform

Search Acumen has enhanced its commercial real estate due diligence platform, ForeSite, by adding new datasets to identify property transaction risks.

Related topics:  Commercial,  Commercial finance
Rozi Jones
3rd December 2019
computer online tech
"The new data layers have been integrated to provide commercial real estate lawyers with access to 40 public datasets."

The new data layers have been integrated to provide commercial real estate lawyers with access to 40 public datasets in total – delivering more detailed insights earlier in the property transaction process. This digital-first approach avoids delays and reduces uncertainty by equipping commercial law firms with the data they need to provide better advice upfront.

Search Acumen has also taken advantage of the City of London’s published datasets for conveyancing search purposes, covering the development pipeline, highways and tree preservation orders. Search Acumen has become the first company to integrate and offer access to this data for the legal market through its ForeSite platform. 

Alongside the new data layers, the platform gives lawyers access to information such as planning applications; commercial, corporate and overseas property ownership; Greenbelt land and areas of outstanding beauty; common and public rights of way; and major infrastructure projects like HS2 and Crossrail.

Christian Woodhouse, head of data and strategic products at Search Acumen, commented: “The latest additions to our ForeSite platform will arm lawyers with crucial information to mitigate risk and expedite real estate transactions. Access to large property datasets is helping transform the legal real estate industry away from paper-based processes towards a digital-first approach. This streamlines due diligence processes even further and helps lawyers provide an enhanced service to their clients.

“Property lawyers depend on data to ensure their clients are fully informed about every aspect of the property they’re transacting. That’s why as soon as a useful digital property dataset is available, we work hard to make it readily accessible. Law firms should carefully consider whether they can afford to operate without these kinds of insights at their fingertips. At the same time, public and private sectors must work harder to provide open data access and deliver the government’s vision of a digital revolution in the property sector.”

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