Noted Quantity Surveyors
Because of the nature of their work, quantity surveyors do not become famous as a result of their profession. However, several noted individuals have trained, apprenticed, worked or qualified as quantity surveyors.
- Jon Bass – footballer
- Graham Beecroft – radio personality
- Stuart Boardley – footballer
- Paddy Bradley – Gaelic footballer
- Eric Broadley – automobile designer
- Jodie Broughton – rugby league player, Salford City Reds
- David Byng – footballer
- Alexander Cordell – writer
- David Scott Cowper – yachtsman
- Hugh Coveney – Fine Gael politician
- Colin Eglin – South African politician
- Asha Gill – media
- Bukar Ibrahim – Nigerian politician
- Roger Landes – Military Cross recipient
- John Lymington – writer
- John Eric Paul Mitchell - past All Black Rugby Coach
- Nick McCabe – musician
- Fulton Mackay – actor
- Aliu Mahama – former Vice President of Ghana
- George Martin – musician
- Paul Morrell - UK Chief Construction Advisor
- Edward Morrow – Anglican priest
- Adamu Mu'azu – Nigerian politician
- Charles Tilleard Natusch – New Zealand architect and quantity surveyor
- Bill Paterson – actor
- Phil Redmond – screenwriter
- Jean Roy – Canadian politician
- Iain Russell – footballer
- Philip Welsford Richmond Russell – Bishop of Natal
- Edward Skoyles – researcher into tendering and building waste
- Oliver Stonor – writer
- Neil Turner – Labour MP
- Blair Anderson Wark – Victoria Cross recipient
- Sir Peter George Snell - New Zealand athlete
- Edwin Angeles - Filipino OFW
Read more about this topic: Quantity Surveyor
Famous quotes containing the words noted and/or quantity:
“It should be noted that when he seizes a state the new ruler ought to determine all the injuries that he will need to inflict. He should inflict them once and for all, and not have to renew them every day.”
—Niccolò Machiavelli (14691527)
“... nothing is more human than substituting the quantity of words and actions for their character. But using imprecise words is very similar to using lots of words, for the more imprecise a word is, the greater the area it covers.”
—Robert Musil (18801942)