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Talks and Poster Presentations (with Proceedings-Entry):

G. Navratil, P. Fogliaroni:
"Cadastral Feedback on Spatial Planning";
Talk: Real CORP 2013, Rom; 2013-05-20 - 2013-05-23; in: "Proceedings REAL CORP 2013 Tagungsband", M. Schrenk, V. Popovich, P. Zeile, P. Elisei (ed.); Eigenverlag des Vereins CORP, Schwechat (2013), ISBN: 978-3-9503110-4-4; Paper ID 66, 7 pages.



English abstract:
Spatial planning shall guarantee that the limited resource land is used efficiently. One problem connected to such a task is the control of the resultīs quality. In case of spatial planning the question is, whether the proposed usage and the legal framework requirements actually fit the needs of the society. A problem in such an assessment is the time frame. Planning of concrete situations, e.g., of a large bus stop, is implemented quickly and thus feedback can be collected by the people who were doing the planning. The results on strategic development plans, however, may take decades to become visible and thus it is difficult to learn from mistakes or find examples where the planning was successfully implemented.
In this paper we propose using the cadastre as a source for feedback on spatial planning. The idea is that the cadastre contains all data to show the effects of spatial planning. However, it does so in a way that is not supporting any feedback. The cadastral data must be rearranged in order to extract the effects of spatial planning. We discuss the information hidden in the cadastral data sets and show some directions for implementation issues.

German abstract:
Spatial planning shall guarantee that the limited resource land is used efficiently. One problem connected to such a task is the control of the resultīs quality. In case of spatial planning the question is, whether the proposed usage and the legal framework requirements actually fit the needs of the society. A problem in such an assessment is the time frame. Planning of concrete situations, e.g., of a large bus stop, is implemented quickly and thus feedback can be collected by the people who were doing the planning. The results on strategic development plans, however, may take decades to become visible and thus it is difficult to learn from mistakes or find examples where the planning was successfully implemented.
In this paper we propose using the cadastre as a source for feedback on spatial planning. The idea is that the cadastre contains all data to show the effects of spatial planning. However, it does so in a way that is not supporting any feedback. The cadastral data must be rearranged in order to extract the effects of spatial planning. We discuss the information hidden in the cadastral data sets and show some directions for implementation issues.

Keywords:
Spatial Planning, Cadastre


Electronic version of the publication:
http://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/PubDat_218256.pdf


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.