Title: Digital Cadastral Database DCDB
1Digital Cadastral Database (DCDB)
- Cadastral Maps
- Examples and content
- Link to land titles
- Updating process
- DCDBs
- Background
- Factors for developing DCDB's
- Maintenance of DCDB's
- Upgrading process
Daniel Steudler, April 2001
2Example UK-Scotland
3Example Austria
4Example Switzerland
5Example Denmark
6Contents
- property boundaries
- building footprints
- other land use features (garden, roads, railway
lines, forest, etc.) - street addresses
- general administration boundaries
7Cadastre
- spatial textual component
- complexities
- high integrity with title component
- dynamic (daily transactions)
- SG also responsible for crown land
- Cadastre in Australia historically was
established for land transactions, while in
Europe, the first purpose was fiscal
8Updating of cadastral map
- subdivisions charted in LTO's on index map
- index maps mostly copied from approx. valuation
maps
Spatial update of the cadastral map refers to
those processes that ensure that all new and
existing legal subdivions are recorded, ie. the
cadastral map is up-to-date. Specifically this
should include
- recording all new legal subdivisions
- ensuring map completeness
9DCDB Background
- Public sector
- Spatial Information Industry
- Spatial Data Infrastructure
10Factors for Developing DCDB's
- Technological Development Computerisation
- Technological Development Data Accuracy
- Business Need for National Digital Map Data
11Digital Cad. Map Example Switzerland
12Digital Cad. Map Example Austria
13Digital Cad. Map Example Canberra
14Digital Cad. Map Example Victoria
15Organisations involved in updating (Victoria)
16Upgrading of spatial component
17Evolving Standards
Standards
AV93
PN
VN
TN
HG
GR
1850
1912
1970
End 1970s
1985
1993
2000
Time
1930s
First Surveys
Renovations (Upgrading)
18Observations of Australian DCDB's
- Australia wide
- graphical cadastre
- high GIS focus
- state by state solution
- meta data
- incremental updates
- accuracy upgrade