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katastr

Katastr, commonly referred to as a cadastral system or cadastre, is a public registry and accompanying map that records information about real property, especially land parcels, their boundaries, ownership, and related rights. It combines a parcel-based register with a geospatial representation, often maintained as a cadastral map, and is administered by government authorities under legally defined frameworks. The primary purpose is to provide legal certainty for property transactions and to support land administration, planning, taxation, and public policy.

A cadastral record typically includes a parcel identifier, precise boundaries and area, coordinates, and a physical

Katastr serves several core functions: it establishes and evidences property rights; supports property transfers and dispute

Digital cadastres are common in many countries, integrated with geographic information systems (GIS) and national coordinate

address
or
description.
It
also
lists
ownership
or
possession,
easements
and
other
rights
or
restrictions,
mortgages
or
liens,
and
the
cadastral
value
used
for
taxation.
The
spatial
component
helps
locate
each
parcel
relative
to
neighboring
parcels,
streets,
and
public
infrastructure.
resolution;
informs
urban
and
regional
planning
and
land
use
management;
enables
property
taxation
and
credit
operations;
and
aids
environmental,
infrastructure,
and
risk
assessments.
Data
integrity
and
update
processes
are
tied
to
surveying,
land
surveys,
and
legal
actions
such
as
subdivisions,
mergers,
or
changes
in
rights.
frameworks.
Interoperability
and
public
accessibility
vary
by
jurisdiction,
but
the
underlying
concept
remains
a
stable
foundation
for
real
property
administration
in
most
legal
systems.