Abstract

The use of unmanned aerial vehicles (hereinafter referred to as “UAV”) is one of the most popular ways of collecting objective spatial data on the land plots under survey. The main advantages of UAVs include the significantly lower cost of surveying, design and complex cadastral works compared to traditional methods of determining coordinates (e.g. performing a tacheometric survey and plane-table survey). The designed sector of block No. 9 in the Yurga urban district of Kemerovo region with cadastral No. 42:36:0102001 (land category: residential), comprising 22 apartment buildings, is taken as an example. The economic performance of land plots marking, carried out with cadastral accuracy, based on data obtained using UAVs and without the use thereof, is assessed.

Highlights

  • According to electronic cadastral register, there are 1,128,884 land plots in the Kemerovo cadastral district, of which 494,204, or 43.7%, have boundaries that have been defined in accordance with the land legislation (Table 1) [1]

  • The cost of cadastral works depends on the designation purpose of the land plot, e.g. for individual housing construction, individual garage construction, personal subsidiary farming, horticulture and gardening there are separate limit tariffs set by the Government of a particular subject of the Russian Federation, but in our case we will give consideration to the cadastral works regarding the land plots on which apartment buildings are located

  • The key approaches in the analysis are based on the methodology specified in the Schedule of Prices and Socially Necessary Labour Times (SNLT) for the production of design and survey products of land management, land cadastre and land monitoring, approved by the Order of the Committee on Land Resources and Land Survey of the Russian Federation dated December 28, 1995. [4], based on the expenditures of the organization collecting data on the land plot through the use of a UAV

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Summary

Introduction

According to electronic cadastral register, there are 1,128,884 land plots in the Kemerovo cadastral district, of which 494,204, or 43.7%, have boundaries that have been defined in accordance with the land legislation (Table 1) [1]. Kemerovo region lags far behind this indicator, as does the Yurga cadastral area, being part of it.

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