In reply to GoneFishing111:
I'm a retired General Practice Surveyor. Are you a member of the RICS? They no longer call it General Practice, but looking at your list becoming a Valuation Surveyor comes closest to it. Building Surveying will certainly give you a very good grounding if as a Valuation Surveyor, you want to do Building Surveys and RICS Home Buyer Reports but you can still be a Valuation Surveyor and undertake the other disciplines you mention - ie Project Management, Valuation,sales, Lease negotiations, disputes etc.
I trained as a so called GP Surveyor and think that the RICS made the whole system unnecessarily complex by doing away with this title, however as a Valuation Surveyor I carried on undertaking the broad spectrum of Building Surveys, RICS Home Buyer Reports, Schedules of Condition, Valuations for various purposes including retrospective valuations for Inheritance Tax, Matrimonial Division, Capital Gains Tax, breaches of the Landlord and Tenant Acts in relation to disrepair etc. I also got involved in Boundary Dispute resolution and specialised in Expert Witness work relating to Surveyor Negligence claims.
If you haven't done so already I suggest that you contact the RICS for further guidance. I retired nearly 9 years ago and the RICS is constantly changing, but I found it a great career and for the latter half of my career I was self employed, working from home (low overheads) and undertaking a wide variety of work. I still think there is a demand for good surveyors with a sound background in Building Pathology who can undertake full Building Surveys without churning out meaningless reports couched in exclusions clauses. Unfortunately too many "surveyors" can't because they lack the grounding, and this is giving the profession a bad name.
Good luck!