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  • The cadastral map is a key component of the national cadastre. It illustrates all property boundaries and ownership data from across Denmark. It also provides information about protected forests, coastal erostion areas and cliff protection. The cadastral map is a digital legal document. It is intended to present the cadastral register in visual form, such that individual parcels can be identified along with their attribute data (cadastral number, road access, etc.). The cadastral map is also used to determine precisely where property boundaries exist in the landscape, especially when 'actual' boundaries do not match the official 'paper' property boundaries exactly.

  • Planloven §11a, pkt. 26. Konsekvensområde omkring tekniske anlæg. "beliggenheden af konsekvensområder omkring tekniske anlæg, vindmøller og støjende fritidsanlæg m.v. i landzone, som skal friholdes for ny støjfølsom anvendelse."

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    Markblokkortet er et digitalt markkort, med landbrugsarealer samlet i markblokke. En markblok er en geografisk sammenhængende enhed bestående af landbrugsarealer. Markblokkenes grænser følger typisk permanente skel i landskabet. Kortet anvendes ved administrationen af sager, der knytter sig til geografisk stedfæstelse af dyrknings-arealer, primært af EU's arealbaserede støtteordninger. Markblokkortet indeholder ca. 450.000 markblokke, som dækker ca. 2,8 millioner hektar landbrugsareal. Hver markblok identificeres med et markbloknummer og indeholder attributter for geografisk areal, type og støtteberettiget areal.

  • Matriklen er grundlaget for ejendomsregistreringen i Danmark og udgør en vigtig del af administrationsgrundlaget i den offentlige forvaltning. Matriklen består konceptuelt af matrikelregistret, matrikelkortet og matrikelarkivet. Registret indeholder oplysninger om arealer, herunder evt. vej- eller vandløbsarealer noteringsforhold (f.eks om landbrugsejendomme, samlede faste ejendomme eller fredskov). Matrikelkortet er et digitalt, juridisk kortværk, som viser de registrerede ejendomsgrænser og vejrettigheder. I matrikelkortet vises også de fredskovsbelagte arealer, zoner for strandbeskyttelse og klitfredning. Matrikelarkivet indeholder bl.a. tidligere gældende matrikelkort, matrikelprotokoller og registrerede matrikulære sager, herunder måloplysninger. Matrikelregistret og matrikelkortet er integreret i én samlet datamodel, hvor ”Matrikulære data” er det bærende dataelement. Matrikulære data kan deles op i tre grupper: Elementer i basismatriklen, øvrige elementer og temaer. Basismatriklen indeholder de elementer, der indgår i den matrikulære proces, og de er vigtige elementer i bestemmelsen af den grundlæggende matrikulære situation. Elementer i basismatriklen: Matrikelskel, optaget vej, jordstykke, centroidepunkt, skelpunkt, fikspunkt, grænsesten. Øvrige elementer indeholder administrative og matrikulære områder, der automatisk kan afledes ud fra elementer i basismatriklen. De indgår således ikke direkte i den matrikulære proces, men kan bruges som støttemateriale i processen. Temaer: Region, kommune, sogn, ejerlav, herred, opmålingsdistrikt. Endelig er temaer elementer, der bygger på den grundlæggende matrikulære situation, og som indgår i den matrikulære proces (jordrente, majoratskov, stormfald, fredskov, strandbeskyttelse, klitfredning, notering om jordforurening).

  • An urban morphological zone (UMZ) is defined as a "set of urban areas laying less than 200 m apart". This layer contains UMZ delineations for Europe, based on Corine Land Cover database. During 2012, the UMZ methodology was updated in order to correct errors derived for the water course as join elements between urban areas. Previous version applied over CLC v15 (and previous version) joined many small urban areas due to the water presence. This fact was erroneous from the landscape and urban perspective as most of those areas remain as urban-rural typologies. Moreover, water courses cannot be considered as roads from the urban morphological view (either from the commuting point of understanding). This new version, known as v16, corrected this effect in the majority of cases.

  • Changes between UMZs in 2000 and UMZs in 2006 using CLC version 16. Most changes are Positive changes, understood as areas of urban sprawl (i.e. new UMZ areas between 2000 and 2006), while negative changes describe the reduction of a certain UMZ between 2000 and 2006 (warning: some negative changes might be due to different interpretations between 2000-2006).

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    Owners of real estate, real estate agents, lawyers, land surveyors, public authorities and others need to know if a forest is preservation. This is an important information, because areas must be driven by the forestry rules on sustainable operation. A forest that is required for preservation must consist of trees that either form or are growing up to the forest of tall trees. Mosses, herds, meadows and the like, which naturally belong to a peace forest, must be preserved as they are, regardless of size. The preservation obligation follows the property. This means that a new owner always takes over the peace forest duty upon purchase of the property. Preservation duty is preceded by other rights, and does not lapse if the property is on a forced sale.

  • Changes between UMZs in 1990 and UMZs in 2000 using CLC version 16. Most changes are Positive changes, understood as areas of urban sprawl (i.e. new UMZ areas between 1990 and 2000), while negative changes describe the reduction of a certain UMZ between 1990 and 2000 (warning: some negative changes might be due to different interpretations between 1990-2000).

  • An urban morphological zone (UMZ) is defined as a "set of urban areas laying less than 200 m apart". This layer contains UMZ delineations for Europe, based on Corine Land Cover database. During 2012, the UMZ methodology was updated in order to correct errors derived for the water course as join elements between urban areas. Previous version applied over CLC v15 (and previous version) joined many small urban areas due to the water presence. This fact was erroneous from the landscape and urban perspective as most of those areas remain as urban-rural typologies. Moreover, water courses cannot be considered as roads from the urban morphological view (either from the commuting point of understanding). This new version, known as v16, corrected this effect in the majority of cases.

  • An urban morphological zone (UMZ) is defined as a "set of urban areas laying less than 200 m apart". This layer contains UMZ delineations for Europe, based on Corine Land Cover database. During 2012, the UMZ methodology was updated in order to correct errors derived for the water course as join elements between urban areas. Previous version applied over CLC v15 (and previous version) joined many small urban areas due to the water presence. This fact was erroneous from the landscape and urban perspective as most of those areas remain as urban-rural typologies. Moreover, water courses cannot be considered as roads from the urban morphological view (either from the commuting point of understanding). This new version, known as v16, corrected this effect in the majority of cases.