Cadastre Domain
Land Administration and Legal Territorial Systems
Cadastre is the legal and administrative foundation of territorial Digital Twin Systems.
Cadastre assets are managed as legal and spatial land units, governing rights, use, value, and development across the territory. These units define how land is owned, regulated, taxed, and transformed, providing the institutional framework upon which all other territorial domains depend.
Within the TwinGEO Framework, cadastre connects spatial representation with legal legitimacy, governance, and decision authority.

Core Components of the Cadastre Domain
The cadastre domain integrates the key elements of land administration, including:
- Cadastral systems and territorial units
Definition and maintenance of parcels, administrative boundaries, and legal land units. - Land tenure and rights management
Ownership, possession, use rights, restrictions, and responsibilities associated with land. - Land use planning and zoning
Regulatory frameworks that define permitted uses, densities, and development conditions. - Land valuation and fiscal cadastre
Assessment of land and property value for taxation, compensation, and public finance. - Land development and planning control
Authorization, monitoring, and enforcement of land transformation and urban growth. - Integrated land administration systems
Institutional coordination between legal, spatial, fiscal, and planning components.
Together, these elements structure how land is governed, transformed, and protected.
Cadastre as a Cross-Domain Foundation
Cadastre underpins all other territorial domains:
- Hydrology, through floodplain regulation and land use constraints
- Mobility and utilities, through rights-of-way and easements
- Buildings, through property units and development permissions
- Environmental management, through protected areas and legal boundaries
Without cadastre, Digital Twins may represent physical reality, but lack institutional validity.
From Cadastre to Digital Twins
In TwinGEO, cadastre is not a static registry.
It becomes part of an operational Digital Twin when:
- legal land units are linked to physical and functional assets
- planning and regulatory processes are explicitly modeled
- changes in rights, value, and use are tracked over time
This enables Digital Twins to support decisions related to:
- land policy and governance
- urban development and control
- infrastructure planning
- fiscal sustainability
Domains as Systems, Not Categories
TwinGEO domains are not software groupings or thematic data layers.
They are real-world system families that structure Digital Twin development across disciplines, lifecycles, and decision contexts.
Each domain contributes essential assets, processes, and observation pathways toward integrated territorial Digital Twin Systems.