Title: Maintaining boundary relationships within spatial databases
1Maintaining boundaryrelationships within
spatialdatabases
Lesley Arnold Landgate Email lesley.arnold_at_landgat
e.wa.gov.au
2Case Studies
Strategy
Introduction
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Introduction
- Administrative, operational and cadastral
boundaries - are often coincident in reality
- Need to manage co-linearity
- with in spatial databases
- between agency data sets
- Misalignment due to
- different levels of data capture
- precision and accuracy
- varying degrees of data currency
- conflicting business needs
- Problem exacerbated by need
- to spatially upgrade cadastre
- Problem exposed through SLIP
3Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
The Misalignment Problem
- Creates an overhead in data maintenance
- Ad hoc changes logistically difficult to manage
- New data must be duplicated and managed in
multiple databases - Agencies apply data shifts to keep data
synchronised - Misalignment causes uncertainty in data usage
- Results of geographic analysis are invalid
- spatial queries retrieve incorrect results
- incorrect area calculations
4Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
States Cadastral Database
- SCDB is a dynamic database
- Integration of new surveys
- 500 new surveys per month
- 69 automatically integrated
- Spatial upgrades (87 complete)
- Digitised points reduced by 5500 points/month
- 210,000 points remaining
- ad hoc anomaly resolution
- Administration boundaries updated
- New representations of coastline and
- inland waters
- Roads voids being polygonised
5Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Department of Planning
- Metropolitan and Regional Planning Scheme
Boundaries - Cadastre is used as a reference base for all
planning products - Misaligned boundary data issues
- Poor presentation
- Slivers and incorrect information
- planning decisions ambiguous
- misalignment with aerial imagery
- Incorrect SLIP Interest Enquiry decisions
- Multiple versions of cadastre stored
- high costs of managing spatial discrepancies
6Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Water Corporation
- Manages the States Water Supply Network
- Maintain a land parcel data layer
- Water pipelines, sewers and connection points are
offset from land parcel boundaries
7Strategy
Introduction
Case Studies
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Water Corporation
- Mismatch between Water Corp land parcel data and
cadastre - Periodic shift vectors applied to maintain object
relationships - Linear objects not always reconcilable
- Sliver polygons between cadastre and planning
boundaries - Use of imagery increases perception of error
- Water Corp customers subjected to data shifts
8Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Strategy
- Cross government strategies require a Sustainable
Approach - Development of real time business processing
- consistent data currency across the geographic
data sets - accurate data for social, economic and
environmental decision making - Use of robust, flexible and cost effective
systems that enable - efficient data validation
- economical technology renewal
- reuse of data, processes and workflows
- Use of automation to address human and technology
resource constraints - Participatory model to ensure the longevity and
usage of data resources, systems and products
well into the future.
9Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Topological concepts
- Topology refers to knowledge about relative
positioning of spatial features - Topological representations modeled in terms of
- Network Connectivity
- Planar Containment, Adjacency, Disjoint
10Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Topological concepts
- Planar Topology rubber sheeting effect
- Relationship of each piece of data does not
change adjacency maintained - Same number of pieces, same order
- Edges match retained
11Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Referential Topology Management
- Two main approaches
- Using Topology Data Management Toolsets/rules
- Building topological relationships within spatial
databases
12Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Referential Topology Management
- Using Topology Data Management Toolsets/rules
- Persisted topological structures
- Geometry stored as nodes, edges, faces
- Data validation is pre-processed
- Time consuming to bring together agency data sets
- Example 1Spatial Radius Topology
CAD
New Data
ADMIN
Primary Geographic Database
Topological validation
13Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Referential Topology Management
- Building topological relationships within spatial
databases - Suited to managing data within a single database
- No topology is stored only the user defined rules
- Geometry stored as coordinate pairs
- Topology maintained during editing
- Example ESRI Geodatabase Relational
Implementation
New Data
Topological validation
Primary Geographic Database
Error resolution
14Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Traditional Boundary Management
- Agency Users must manage
- Conflation between data sets
- Management of incremental updates or redo version
enhancements - Boundary maintenance as topological relationships
not possible
X
SLIP Users
Agency users/ editors
Data Copy
Primary Geographic Database
Data version or incremental update
Agency Database
15 Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Data Hosting and Direct Editing
- Approach integrated data sets requires same
software solution - Referential topology between boundary data
managed via sematic relationships and logical
adjacency - Benefit to state Topologically correct
integrated boundary data
?
SLIP Users
Internal users and editors
Primary Geographic Database
Boundary data changes managed automatically
Agency Primary Database
One off database replication
Agency Boundary Data
Trickle feed updates
Agency data editors
16Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
What Next
Concepts
Native Title Spatial Services (NTSS) Experience
- Native Title Boundaries are aligned to cadastre
or prescribed coordinates - NT Data critical to accurate interrogation (SLIP
IE) - Approach NTSS data hosted in SCDB
- 4 additional boundary admin layers - shared line
usages - 135 NT Applications/Determinations/ Indigenous
Land Use Agreements - composed of 62,000 lines, 40 are linked to cad
lines - cost 45,000 plus 2 FTEs for six months
- SmartPlan
- Tools for the creation and maintenance of the NT
datasets - Referential topology rules trigger cadastral
boundary changes to NT boundaries automatically - Changes associated with permanent points are
manually adjusted via automatic notifications
17Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
Concepts
What Next
Positional Accuracy Improvement Group
-
- Coordinator Jenny Smith - Jenny.smith_at_walis.wa.g
ov.au - Cross Agency Representation
- Department of Planning
- Department of Minerals and Petroleum
- Water Corporation
- Department of Conservation and Environment
- Department of Water
- Landgate
- National Native Title Tribunal
- Local Government Representative
- Also represented
- SLIP IE
- Native Title Spatial Services
- Aerial Photography
- Topography Database
18Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Conclusion
Management
Concepts
What Next
Positional Accuracy Improvement Group
-
- Draft Terms of Reference
- Best Practise Data Management
- Managing relationships between boundary data
sets - Emphasis on States Cadastral Data Set
- Strategies
- Bring forward completion of the Spatial
Cadastral Upgrade - Ad hoc upgrades are logistically more difficult
to - mange than new subdivisions
- Partnerships arrangements required
- Develop processes, such as the supply of shift
vectors, - to manage integration of spatially upgraded
data - Examine software solutions to better manage
boundary - relationships
19Introduction
Case Studies
Strategy
Problem
Management
Conclusion
What Next
Concepts
Conclusion
Maintaining boundary relationships in spatial
databases is a challenge that requires
significant cooperation and commitment across
government agencies
With this in mind it is important to have a
clear shared vision on how data can be managed
more strategically, and importantly, how we can
incorporate sustainability principles into out
data management processes
20Thank you
Lesley Arnold Landgate Email lesley.arnold_at_landgat
e.wa.gov.au