Arts Heritage is the institutional publisher of Heritage Survey Assistant — conservation-led survey and reporting software for practitioners and stewards of heritage assets. The product is built around the working assumptions of conservation practice: that observations carry evidential weight, that issued documents are documentary acts, and that successor practitioners inherit a record they need to be able to rely upon.
Arts Heritage (the publisher)
Arts Heritage develops and publishes Heritage Survey Assistant. The company's focus is conservation infrastructure: software that respects the evidential character of conservation work and supports practitioners in producing structured, defensible documentation.
Heritage Survey Assistant (the software)
Heritage Survey Assistant is the product. It is used by conservation practices, heritage contractors, conservation architects, surveyors, consultants, collections teams, museums, estates, trusts, local authorities and cathedral workshops responsible for surveying, treating and stewarding heritage assets.
What it is not
It is not a generic inspection tool, a CMMS, or a free-form note-taking application. It is a record system designed around conservation evidence, with the structural properties — immutability, lineage, attribution — that conservation documentation requires.
Approach
Conservation language is preserved deliberately. Arts Heritage avoids exaggerated automation claims; Heritage Survey Assistant supports the practitioner, who remains responsible for the work, the recommendations and the issued document.
Frequently asked
- Who publishes Heritage Survey Assistant?
- Heritage Survey Assistant is published by Arts Heritage. Arts Heritage is the institutional parent brand; Heritage Survey Assistant is the software product.
- Is it suitable for institutional procurement?
- Yes. The platform is designed for institutional use with structured records, audit trail, immutable issued reports and exportable archival data.