SpatiEdge draws its foundation from professional participation in the execution of large-scale, flagship geospatial mission projects, contributing to survey integration, GIS database development, and decision-ready spatial outputs for government programmes.
The Jatadhar Muhan Port Cadastral GIS project was undertaken to establish a precise, legally defensible, and geo-referenced cadastral framework to support port planning, development, and regulatory compliance. The project focused on delineating land parcels, port limits, and ownership boundaries through the integration of high-accuracy ground surveys and advanced GIS technologies.
This initiative provided a foundational spatial intelligence system to enable informed decision-making, reduce land-related ambiguities, and support statutory approvals for port-led infrastructure development along the Odisha coastline.
Port Development Authorities
Government of Odisha (Associated Line Departments)
Planning, Revenue, and Regulatory Agencies
Establish an accurate, geo-referenced cadastral database for the Jatadhar Muhan Port area
Clearly define port boundaries, land ownership parcels, and administrative limits
Support port master planning, land acquisition, and compliance processes
Minimize boundary disputes through authoritative spatial records
Enable seamless integration with state and national GIS frameworks
DGPS-based ground control surveys for high-precision boundary demarcation
Collection and validation of cadastral records, revenue maps, and land schedules
Geo-referencing and digitization of village cadastral maps
Delineation of port limits, buffer zones, and regulatory boundaries
Creation of a structured GIS database for land parcels and attributes
Preparation of thematic maps for planning and statutory submissions
The project adopted a scientifically rigorous, survey-first methodology. High-accuracy DGPS observations were used to establish control points, ensuring spatial precision aligned with government survey standards. Legacy cadastral maps and revenue records were geo-referenced and digitally harmonized with ground survey data.
GIS layers were systematically structured to represent land ownership, parcel extents, port boundaries, and administrative units. Multiple validation checks were performed to ensure positional accuracy, attribute consistency, and regulatory acceptability.
DGPS / GNSS Survey Systems
Total Station for detailed boundary verification
GIS Platforms (ArcGIS / QGIS)
High-resolution satellite imagery
CAD–GIS integration for engineering compatibility
Geo-referenced cadastral GIS database
Digitized land parcel and ownership maps
Port boundary and regulatory compliance maps
Survey control point documentation
GIS-ready datasets for integration with planning systems
Technical reports supporting statutory approvals
Enabled accurate land identification for port development and expansion
Reduced risks related to boundary disputes and land ambiguity
Supported faster regulatory clearances through reliable spatial evidence
Strengthened institutional capacity for long-term land and port management
Created a scalable geospatial foundation for future coastal infrastructure projects