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451418607 Land Administration

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Title: 451418607 Land Administration


1
451-418/607 Land Administration
On-line land information service
  • Mohsen Kalantari

2
Objectives of Lecture
  • To understand the reasons behind the growth in
    demand for land information
  • To understand how internet technology is being
    used to provide access to land information
  • Introducing quality of service criteria for the
    assessment of an online land information system

3
Part 1The growing demandand need for access
toland information
4
What Information are we talking about?
Interest Location Dimension
  • Ownership
  • Type, Proprietor, Primary Usage
  • Encumbrances
  • Easements, Mortgages, Caveats, Covenants
  • Valuation Land Tax
  • Unimproved Value, Improved Value, Rate Payable,
    Rate Assessment Number, Property Identifiers,
    Ratepayer
  • Development and Planning
  • Planning Zone, Planning Scheme, Planning Process,
    Proposed Changes, Vendor Certificates
  • Location Dimension
  • Address, Map References, Jurisdictions, Parcel
    Identifiers (CPN, SPI, Lot/Plan), Dimension

5
But wait.. theres more
Interest Location Dimension
  • and these are only really the Core datasets
  • What about
  • Environmental Datasets
  • Vegetation
  • Salinity
  • Minerals
  • Social Datasets
  • Population
  • Demographics
  • Infrastructure
  • Private Infrastructure (Building Footprints and
    Description)
  • Building Regulations (Air Con, Lifts, Fire),
  • Public Infrastructure (Roads, Water, Sewage,
    Telco, Drainage, Gas, Elec)
  • Services
  • Garbage,
  • Recycling,
  • Green Waste,
  • Street Cleaning
  • Imagery

6
Land Info Users and their Needs
  • Public Sector / Government
  • Urban and Regional Planning Development,
    Health, Emergency Management, Crime, Education,
    Environment, Registry - Tenure Security, Taxation
  • Private Sector / Industry
  • Farmers, Developers, Manufacturers, Retailers,
    Finance, Utility Companies,
  • General Public
  • Property Management Purchase, Location Based
    Services i.e. Small Scale Decision making

7
Access The Old Way
  • Land information was primarily used for the
    management of the land market
  • The public had limited access to land information
  • All systems were bureaucratic and paper based
  • Transactions and search requests were completed
    over the counter and performed manually
  • Information not centralized within a single
    department

8
Government structurehindered sharing and access
In the past (and even today)
High Level Government Department of Premier and
Cabinet / Treasury
Mapping
Valuation
Registry





Planning
Department of Primary Industries
Department of Human Services
Department of Infrastructure
Department of Education
Department of Lands
9
The Drive for Change
  • The Change Drivers
  • Sustainable Development
  • Government Cost Cutting
  • Community service and information demands
  • What does this mean?
  • More environmental legislation applied to land

10
How does land information help achieve
Sustainability?
3. Social Dimension
Health Management
Crime Management
Education Management
Arts Culture Management
2. Enviro Dimension
Natural Resource Management
Infrastructure Management
Urban Regional Planning
Sustainable Development
1. Economic Dimension
Registration
Valuation
Economic Development
Spatial Information (Location/Dimension)
Enabler
Time
11
The Changing Role of Spatial Information
Departments
Looking ahead.
High Level Government Department of Premier and
Cabinet / Treasury
Office of Chief Information Officer (CIO)
Mapping
Valuation
Registry





Planning
Department of Primary Industries
Department of Human Services
Department of Infrastructure
Department of Education
Department of Lands
12
Sustainable Development eGovernment
The Grand Plan Spatial Information supporting
eGovernment, eCitizenship and Sustainable
Development
User Decisions Transactions
General Public Users
Private Sector Users
Government Users
Applications Functions
Crime
Emergency
Natural Resource
Health
Planning
Environment
Infrastructure
Centralised or Distributed Operating System
(Coordinated by SII) e.g. SLIP
Data Networks
Social Datasets
Environmental Datasets
Economic Datasets
13
Technology isnt usually the problem
  • As technology develops bandwidth and
    visualisation problems are overcome
  • The real problems with providing access to
    information lie with
  • Data Sharing Interoperability
  • Creating collaborative arrangements and
    partnerships
  • Maintenance Regimes
  • Ensuring the dynamic datasets are always up to
    date
  • Privacy and Security
  • Ensuring privacy laws are adhered to and that
    information is stored in a secure manner

14
Part 2Providing Access Technology
15
Land Information Systems
  • LIS Software Development
  • LIS Platform Development

Kalantari, 2004
16
A Static Web Page
Server
Client
Get http//www.server.org/info.html
info.html specific server Generated headers
ltHTMLgt ltBODYgt ltH1gtIans HomepageltH1gt lt/BODYgt lt/HTM
Lgt
Loney, 2003
17
A Dynamic Web Page
Client
Server
Get http//www. server.org /page.asp
Web Server Process
Main Process
page.asp a plain HTML document
ActiveX Object/.NET Object
page.asp
Database
External Libraries
Loney, 2003
18
3-Tier Architecture
PRESENTATION
LOGIC (Web Server)
LOGIC (Map Server)
SPATIAL DATABASE
19
A Dynamic Spatial Web Page
TIER 1
BROWSER
TIER 2
INTEGRATED WEB MAPPING SERVER
WEB SERVER
SPATIAL DATABASE SERVER
MAP SERVER
TIER 3
CADASTRAL LAYERS
SINGLE SPATIAL DATABASE e.g. Oracle
ATTRIBUTE DATABASE
(Majid, 1999)
20
Looking Ahead..
  • Client Side (Tier 1)
  • From HTML to XML/GML for presentation e.g.
    landXML
  • Browsers with built in spatial plug-ins and
    viewers
  • More powerful spatial services and applications
    as bandwidth capabilities increase.
  • Logic Tier (Tier 2)
  • Distributed Processing Architectures e.g. Web
    Mapping Services creating maps from many data
    sources
  • Continued growth in server-side scripting e.g.
    ColdFusion, ASP, JSP
  • Data Services (Tier 3)
  • Abolishing of gap between spatial DBs and other
    DBs e.g. Oracles Location Based Platform

21
Part 3Evaluating online systems
22
Methodology
  • Online monitoring
  • October 2004
  • December 2004
  • April 2005
  • May 2005
  • Measuring several characteristics to describe
    each service
  • Performance
  • Functionality
  • User requirements
  • Popularity

23
Performance
  • f (Throughput, Response time)

24
Performance
  • Improper network setting
  • The complexity of functionality
  • Combination of service, network and client
    machine

25
Functionality - General
  • Visualization
  • Zoom
  • Identification
  • Selection
  • Legend
  • Scale
  • Out-put preparation

26
Functionality - Special
  • Rights, Responsibilities, Restrictions
  • Land extent
  • Land transfer
  • Ownership certificate
  • Property taxation
  • Land market
  • Land use

27
User Requirements
  • Type of user
  • Information specialist
  • Decision maker
  • Interested citizen
  • User demand
  • Flexibility
  • Accessibility
  • Optimized models and functions
  • Information demand
  • Raw data
  • Value added data
  • Strategic information

28
Popularity
  • Number of link to website
  • Web service traffic
  • Number of return visits
  • Length of time on web site

29
Popularity
  • www.Linkpopularity.com

30
Popularity
  • Appropriate titles

31
Discussion
  • Be specific about the purpose of the land
    information service and identify the range of
    users including information specialist, decision
    makers or interested citizens and target them
    with proper functionality and data.
  • Provide good communication channels for the
    community
  • Presenting different architecture based on the
    client connection rates and levels of service
    interactivity to deliver reliable and popular
    services.
  • Create more user-friendly interfaces with less
    discipline-specific terminology especially for
    decision makers and interested users.

32
Exam Questions
  • Why has the need and demand for access to land
    information increased in recent times?
  • What technologies are available to the public to
    access land information remotely? Use diagrams
    and case studies to assist your answer.
  • Explain how Land information Systems can be
    evaluated.
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