LADM Refined Survey Model

Conference Paper (2019)
Author(s)

Anna Shnaidman (TU Delft - GIS Technologie)

P.J.M. van Oosterom (TU Delft - GIS Technologie)

Christiaan Lemmen (University of Twente)

Research Group
GIS Technologie
Copyright
© 2019 A. Shnaidman, P.J.M. van Oosterom, Christiaan Lemmen
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 A. Shnaidman, P.J.M. van Oosterom, Christiaan Lemmen
Research Group
GIS Technologie
Pages (from-to)
73-82
ISBN (print)
9788792853929
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

First Edition of the Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) has three packages related to: Parties (people and organisations); Basic Administrative Units, Rights, Responsibilities, and Restrictions (of ownership rights); spatial units (parcels, and the legal space of buildings and utility networks) with a sub package for Surveying and Representation (geometry and topology). The latter sub-package provides the functionality to manage observations and cadastral surveys measurements.
Contents of LADM implementations are based on authentic source documents, including the names of the persons having a role (responsibility) in the process of the initial data acquisition and/or in the maintenance process. This concerns legal/administrative data and spatial data based on field surveys and observations – where responsible professionals can be conveyors, registrars, surveyors, grassroot surveyors, citizens themselves (participatory surveying) and paralegals.
Some of the existing parts of Edition I of the LADM are proposed to be refined in the context of development of Edition II of the standard. This will allow for the inclusion of better structured meta data – also in support of participatory approaches in cadastral surveying. Richer semantics may require more rigid representations of the various Code Lists and the values they contain (adding more structure and using sematic technologies to define meaning of values).
An extended survey and legal models are proposed and presented in this paper. This implies adjustments from field observations to the spatial database and the generation of quality labels.

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