Tittel: | The Cadastral Surveyor in Finland | Ansvar: | Kirsikka Riekkinen | Forfatter: | Riekkinen, Kirsikka | Materialtype: | Artikkel - elektronisk | Signatur: | Kart og plan | Utgitt: | Oslo : Universitetsforlaget, 2024 | Omfang: | S. 222–225 | ISBN/ISSN: | 0447-3278 | Serie: | Kart og plan ; 2/2024 | Emneord: | Matrikkel | Geografiske emneord: | Finland | Note: | Open access CC BY 4.0 Attribution 4.0 International. | Innhold: | Introduction The Finnish cadastral system consists of the prevailing property structure, rights, restrictions and responsibilities related to land, and the processes of updating these. The main elements of the system are the cadastre, land register, and cadastral map, and these three form the land information system (LIS). The National Land Survey is responsible for maintaining all elements of the LIS since 2010, and works under the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. Before 2010, the registration responsibilities were given to district courts. The cadastre records information on the real estates and their features. The cadastral data includes features such as identification number, location, area, easements, and formation history of the real estate. It is linked to land register that includes the ownership and other use rights as land lease, and mortgages. The cadastral map complements the registers, showing the real estates and their boundaries on an index map. The Finnish LIS is public, and the National Land Survey provides information and sells extracts of the registers. The land register has public faith and credit, whereas cadastre does not, but data on the cadastre can be considered as being good quality. The cadastral system has developed over centuries and is based on the German type of cadastral system. | Del av verk: | Kart og plan 2/2024 |
|
|