LT2008 m. APC "Antiqua“ vykdė žvalgomuosius archeologinius tyrinėjimus įvairiose Vilniaus vietose [p. 445].
ENIn 2008, APC “Antiqua” conducted evaluations at various sites in Vilnius. 58 m2 was excavated at Aludarių St. 1 / Pakalnės St. 2. A 0.2–2.5 m thick cultural layer formed during the construction and reconstruction of the V. Šopenas Brewery (later the Tauras plant) in the 19th–20th centuries was discovered in 2 trenches and 8 test pits. Human bones from destroyed graves, which were disturbed in constructing the brewery and the adjacent buildings, were discovered in trench 2 and test pit 9. 14.25 m2 was excavated at J. Basanavičiaus St. 15 / Mindaugo St. 3. A 2.5–2.7 m thick cultural layer was recorded in trenches 2 and 3. No cultural layer was established in test pit 1 nor was sterile soil reached. Many fragments of 17th–18th-century household pottery and stove tiles were found in the cultural layer’s lower horizons (from 1.2 m on down). 12 m2 (3 test pits) were excavated and 240 m2 surveyed at Labdarių St. 3. A 1–1.6 m thick cultural layer formed in the 19th–20th centuries was recorded together with storage pits. 6 m2 was excavated in the courtyard at Labdarių St. 4. masonry wall fragment: the remains of stairs or a basement entrance, was discovered in the S past of a test pit.A 2.2 thick cultural layer was recorded in the central part of a test pit. The lower horizon (0.3 m thick) dates to the 15th (?)–16th centuries. An 8.2 m wide ditch was discovered near the building at Vilniaus St. 22. It contained sparse 16th–18th-century finds. A fragment of an early 19th-century masonry wall was unearthed on the side of Vilniaus St. 33 m2 was surveyed on B. Radvilaitės and Šiltadaržio Sts. cultural layer was located at a depth of up to 0.5–1.8 m. Sterile soil was reached at a depth of 0.9–1.3 m at some places. The upper horizons of the cultural layer were formed in the 19th–20th centuries. The 17th–18th-century horizons of the cultural layer were reached at the bottom of the excavated test pits. A small fragment of a masonry wall was unearthed in technological pit 6. It is hypothesised that this could be the remains of a Gothic building that stood here in the 16th century.