Remote Sensing for Land Administration

Land administration constitutes the socio-technical systems that govern land tenure, use, value and development within a jurisdiction. The land parcel is the fundamental unit of analysis. Each parcel has identifiable boundaries, associated rights, and linked parties. Spatial information is fundament...

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Main Authors: Rohan Bennett, Peter van Oosterom, Christiaan Lemmen, Mila Koeva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-08-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
UAV
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/15/2497
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spelling doaj-389b62905f254189ab6e2f7f99d8e5112020-11-25T03:01:52ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922020-08-01122497249710.3390/rs12152497Remote Sensing for Land AdministrationRohan Bennett0Peter van Oosterom1Christiaan Lemmen2Mila Koeva3Swinburne Business School, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn 3122, Victoria, AustraliaFaculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology, 2600 AA Delft, The NetherlandsKadaster International, Land Registry and Mapping Agency of the Netherlands, 7311 KZ Apeldoorn, The NetherlandsITC Faculty, University of Twente, 7500 AE Enschede, The NetherlandsLand administration constitutes the socio-technical systems that govern land tenure, use, value and development within a jurisdiction. The land parcel is the fundamental unit of analysis. Each parcel has identifiable boundaries, associated rights, and linked parties. Spatial information is fundamental. It represents the boundaries between land parcels and is embedded in cadastral sketches, plans, maps and databases. The boundaries are expressed in these records using mathematical or graphical descriptions. They are also expressed physically with monuments or natural features. Ideally, the recorded and physical expressions should align, however, in practice, this may not occur. This means some boundaries may be physically invisible, lacking accurate documentation, or potentially both. Emerging remote sensing tools and techniques offers great potential. Historically, the measurements used to produce recorded boundary representations were generated from ground-based surveying techniques. The approach was, and remains, entirely appropriate in many circumstances, although it can be timely, costly, and may only capture very limited contextual boundary information. Meanwhile, advances in remote sensing and photogrammetry offer improved measurement speeds, reduced costs, higher image resolutions, and enhanced sampling granularity. Applications of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), laser scanning, both airborne and terrestrial (LiDAR), radar interferometry, machine learning, and artificial intelligence techniques, all provide examples. Coupled with emergent societal challenges relating to poverty reduction, rapid urbanisation, vertical development, and complex infrastructure management, the contemporary motivation to use these new techniques is high. Fundamentally, they enable more rapid, cost-effective, and tailored approaches to 2D and 3D land data creation, analysis, and maintenance. This Special Issue hosts papers focusing on this intersection of emergent remote sensing tools and techniques, applied to domain of land administration.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/15/2497UAVLiDARautomated feature extractioncadasterland registrationland use planning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rohan Bennett
Peter van Oosterom
Christiaan Lemmen
Mila Koeva
spellingShingle Rohan Bennett
Peter van Oosterom
Christiaan Lemmen
Mila Koeva
Remote Sensing for Land Administration
Remote Sensing
UAV
LiDAR
automated feature extraction
cadaster
land registration
land use planning
author_facet Rohan Bennett
Peter van Oosterom
Christiaan Lemmen
Mila Koeva
author_sort Rohan Bennett
title Remote Sensing for Land Administration
title_short Remote Sensing for Land Administration
title_full Remote Sensing for Land Administration
title_fullStr Remote Sensing for Land Administration
title_full_unstemmed Remote Sensing for Land Administration
title_sort remote sensing for land administration
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Land administration constitutes the socio-technical systems that govern land tenure, use, value and development within a jurisdiction. The land parcel is the fundamental unit of analysis. Each parcel has identifiable boundaries, associated rights, and linked parties. Spatial information is fundamental. It represents the boundaries between land parcels and is embedded in cadastral sketches, plans, maps and databases. The boundaries are expressed in these records using mathematical or graphical descriptions. They are also expressed physically with monuments or natural features. Ideally, the recorded and physical expressions should align, however, in practice, this may not occur. This means some boundaries may be physically invisible, lacking accurate documentation, or potentially both. Emerging remote sensing tools and techniques offers great potential. Historically, the measurements used to produce recorded boundary representations were generated from ground-based surveying techniques. The approach was, and remains, entirely appropriate in many circumstances, although it can be timely, costly, and may only capture very limited contextual boundary information. Meanwhile, advances in remote sensing and photogrammetry offer improved measurement speeds, reduced costs, higher image resolutions, and enhanced sampling granularity. Applications of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), laser scanning, both airborne and terrestrial (LiDAR), radar interferometry, machine learning, and artificial intelligence techniques, all provide examples. Coupled with emergent societal challenges relating to poverty reduction, rapid urbanisation, vertical development, and complex infrastructure management, the contemporary motivation to use these new techniques is high. Fundamentally, they enable more rapid, cost-effective, and tailored approaches to 2D and 3D land data creation, analysis, and maintenance. This Special Issue hosts papers focusing on this intersection of emergent remote sensing tools and techniques, applied to domain of land administration.
topic UAV
LiDAR
automated feature extraction
cadaster
land registration
land use planning
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/15/2497
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