Alternatives for Economic Boundary Determination in the Establishment of a Cadastral System. Paper to the FIG Working Week 2012 Rome, May 9, 2012

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Transcription:

Alternatives for Economic Boundary Determination in the Establishment of a Cadastral System Paper to the FIG Working Week 2012 Rome, May 9, 2012 by Gottfried Konecny Emeritus Professor Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Alternatives for Economic Boundary Determination in the Establishment of a Cadastral System 1. Introduction why are efficient land registration systems needed? Hernando de Soto and Word Bank, Cadastre 2014, Options 2. Land Boundaries 3. Monumentation of Boundaries 4. Modern Technology tools to establish a Parcel Fabric 4.1. GPS GNSS 4.2. Digital Orthophoto Mapping 4.3. Digital Geodatabase Structure 4.4. High Resolution Satellite Imagery 5. Conclusion 1

1. Introduction Hernando de Soto Economist born 1941 in Peru he stated: insecure land rights deprive a country of the capacity of land to serve as collateral for mortgages; land becomes dead capital 1. Introduction FIG stated: about 50 countries have efficient land registration systems another 50 countries are in the process to establish one this still leaves another 90 countries without one The World Bank: has financed establishment of efficient land registration systems with 1.2B $ during the last 10 years Professional Literature: has been made available to discuss the benefits of efficient land registration systems according to the model Cadastre 2014 2

The tasks have been well described: Jürg Kaufmann in Cadastre 2014: Map and Register in digital form Williamson, Enemark, Wallace, Rajabifard Legal options (Deeds, Titles) Advantages (Sustainable land use planning, Valuation, Taxation) But not the global technical options: for SDI and data providers see butterfly diagram Purpose of the Paper: is to make a contribution in these aspects particularly with respect to boundary descriptions CADASTRE 2014: THE VISION FOR MODERN CADASTRAL SYSTEMS FIG studied the development of modern cadastres in the years 1994 to 1998. The result of the studies was the publication Cadastre 2014: A Vision for Future Cadastral Systems. Today Cadastre 2014 is still the base for further studies e.g. for Cadastre 2034. The vision Cadastre 2014 is the base of the development trend. The vision is becoming a reality..nsdi Conference, 6-7 October 2011, Baku, Azerbaijan 6 3

Statement 1 on Cadastre 2014 Cadastre 2014 will show the complete legal situation of land, including public rights and restrictions! Comment: The population of the world is growing. The consumption on the land is increasing. The absolute control of the individual or of legal entities of land is increasingly being restricted by public interest. To provide security of the land tenure, all facts about land must be made obvious by the cadastral system of the future. Consequences: A new thematic model is necessary. Surveyors must take into consideration public law. 4

2. Boundaries and the Cadastre: Options: which Cadastre? 1. Tax Cadastre does not need boundaries, only areas (resolution 1m) 2. Ownership Cadastre needs accurate boundaries, but this is in the owner s interest only (resolution 1 cm) 3. Multipurpose Cadastre needs map accuracy boundaries only, this is in the public interest to create an SDI, even though land registration does not need it (resolution 1 dm) 5

Metes and bounds description of boundaries used in the USA disadvantage: not geocoded, no topogy for parcel fabric Map description of boundaries if analog, limited to scale, but in general geocoded if digital, coordinates of survey determine accuracy and topology Object definition of parcels in digital data bases the measured boundary point coordinates define the boundaries with survey accuracy and the boundaries determine the topology Metes and bounds description Map description of boundaries 6

Map and Coordinate Description of Boundaries 7

If buildigs are considered part of the cadastre, then this is the first step to a multipurpose cadastre 3. Monumentation of Boundaries advantage: disadvantage: fixed to the earth surface monuments are destroyed due to erosion, decay, construction, human action monuments were surveyed in the past relative to topographic objects (trees, buildings) monuments already were used in Babylonia 1200 B.C. and by the Romans 20 B.C. (Pollio) to 104 A.D. (Frontius) or absolute depending on current positioning technology 1700 1800 astronomic positioning 1800 1950 triangulation and traversing in geodetic networks 1950 1985 electronic distance measurement after 1985 DGPS 8

Be careful: a legally monumented boundary is not a topographic boundary as visible by a fence or a building! boundary onument an urban area Germany 9

oundary onument a rural area Germany 10

Integration of cadastre, topography and utilities depends in multipurpose cadasters often depends on the existence of local SDI s and the laws to permit integration Integration often does not occur because certain tasks are geserved for government operations and some for the private sector 11

12

Digital Topographic Map - DTK 25 example for a value added map 13

ALK mit Stadttopographie, Delmenhorst A value added map for street furniture Stromleitungsdokumentation Stadt Han. Münden a value added map for utilities 14

But utilities may also be identified diferently e.g. Water pipe (1.6m away, 3.3m deep, diameter 50mm); or Gas pipe (1m away, 5.9m deep) or Electric cable (8.3m away, 1.4m deep) 15

Feature Based Feature Life Cycles Change Only Update Better description Of features Database ready Interdependency between layers The survey of topographic point features by techeometry in the UK the Ordnance Survey has made a commitment to the public to update every topographic feature within 6 months 16

Topologically consistent data for areas surveyed with boundaries True polygon data area features are identified with a unique number, the TOID Unique feature IDs (TOIDS) and Version numbers 17

30.5.2012 a topographic map is an unsharp boundary map (as seen in the U.K.) an iron bar is not a stable permanent boundary marker (as seen in the Arabian desert) Settlements are generally faster than maps 18

Rapidly growing areas with lagal transaction s are usually planned, often with computers These planned developments just need geocoding, so that they can immediately be used as cadastral plans after stakeout Cadastral problems therefore then concern illegal occupation areas areas wich have not been properly recorded 4.1. Modern DGPS Adjudication Surveys via GNSS Used in Georgia and Cambodia for New Cadastre Establishment Suitable for Transaction based Update Surveys 19

Photography of Deeds Used Technology Georeferencing (example Georgia) 20

Local Boundary Survey Cost for registering a parcel (includes adjudication ans survey) 8 Progress: Georgia within 5 years 21

4.2. Image Adjudication: if topographic features can be identified in aerial images with 0.1 to 0.2m GSD in urban areas, or with 0.4m GSD in rural areas, or with 0.5 to 2.5m GSD in satellite images (GeoEye, Quickbird, Worldview, Spot5) then image adjudication becomes possible Prerequisite for georeferencing is orthoimage generation and geocoding The result is a Preliminary Parcel Map, which is adequate for the land register to identify each uniquely identified land parcel and attach attributes to it Image Adjudication German Technical Cooperation Project Cadastre in Mali 22

5. Geodatabase when the database for storing the geometric features is suitably structures according to identifiable points, lines, areas, then the geometry may be improved by a change in coordinates based on more precise surveys, e.g. by GNSS This can be done sporadically, when transactions and new surveys occur The Preliminary Parcel Map may be geometrically improved sporadically for all cadastral objects, which require a change In due time the database will improve ist overall geometric accuracy In Transformation Countries, such as the Ukraine, 1) agricultural land has been distributed to citizens, 2) They received a certificate from the Government 3) But local survey companies had to distribute the fields on the ground 4) The Government instituted an Orthophoto imaging program for the entire contry as quality control 5) In the Odessa Oblast 17% of the parcels had to be geometrically corrected This means: The image adjudication methodology using ortho imagery is also applicable for verification of inaccuracies of old or recent survey errors 23

Parcel Fabric as a result of ground surveys Orthophoto Program of the Ukraine 24

Superposition of Cadastral Fabric from Surveyors with Orthophoto Kibera, tha largest slum of Nairobi with 1.5M people does not show details in official maps (1:50 000) 25

But details of Kibera, Nairobi s slum with 1.5M people show well in Google Earth (Ikonos Image 1m GSD) 26

27

Conclusion: 1. Classical Methods of establishing a cadastre are expensive and time consuming, because of the ground survey procedures 2. Image Adjudication procedures are an intermadiate inexpensive and fast step to establish land registration systems efficiently 3. Ground Survey Adjudication procedures using GNSS may be utilized in sporadic steps for needed transactions 4. Databases with appropriate design may be used to gradually improve the geometric accuracy of the parcel fabric 5. Possibilities should be made for fast and economic generation of land registratin systems, so that the many countries not benefiting from one will be able to benefit as fast as possible 28