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Understanding Cadastral Surveying

Cadastral surveying relates to land ownership and property boundaries. It involves interpreting and delineating boundaries, determining land ownership rights and restrictions, and recording property information for maps and plans. Cadastral surveys subdivide land into parcels for ownership or re-establish boundaries of previously surveyed properties. In Victoria, only licensed surveyors under the Surveying Act 2004 are authorized to perform cadastral surveys, which must maintain the integrity of the cadastre - the system of parcel-based land administration comprising physically delineated boundaries and public records of property interests.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
362 views1 page

Understanding Cadastral Surveying

Cadastral surveying relates to land ownership and property boundaries. It involves interpreting and delineating boundaries, determining land ownership rights and restrictions, and recording property information for maps and plans. Cadastral surveys subdivide land into parcels for ownership or re-establish boundaries of previously surveyed properties. In Victoria, only licensed surveyors under the Surveying Act 2004 are authorized to perform cadastral surveys, which must maintain the integrity of the cadastre - the system of parcel-based land administration comprising physically delineated boundaries and public records of property interests.
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What is Cadastral Surveying

About Cadastral Surveying

Cadastral surveying is the discipline of land surveying that relates to the laws of land ownership and the
definition of property boundaries.  It involves interpreting and advising on boundary locations, on the
status of land ownership and on the rights, restrictions and interests in property, as well as the
recording of such information for use on plans, maps, etc.  It also involves the physical delineation of
property boundaries and determination of dimensions, areas and certain rights associated with
properties, whether they are on land, water or defined by natural or artificial features.

Cadastral surveys are generally performed to subdivide land into parcels for ownership under a land title
and to re-establish boundaries of previously surveyed properties to determine the physical extent of
ownership or to facilitate the transfer of the property title.

A surveyor, who is registered as a licensed surveyor under the Surveying Act 2004, is the only person
authorized to perform cadastral surveys in Victoria.  The regulation of cadastral surveying reflects the
importance with which Government holds Victoria’s cadastre.  The cadastre is a parcel-based system of
property (land) administration.  It is comprised of physically delineated boundaries, being the extents of
parcels or interests in parcels, and datasets containing the public record of the interests (i.e.  rights,
restrictions and responsibilities) in those parcels.  The government and community entrust licensed
surveyors to maintain and protect the integrity of the cadastre, which underpins economic development
through confidence in the property market. 

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