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The Swiss coordinate system (or Swiss grid) is a geographic coordinate system used in Switzerland for maps and surveying by the Swiss Federal Office of Topography (Swisstopo).

The map projection used is Oblique Mercator on a 1841 Bessel ellipsoid.

The geodetic datum CH1903 uses as fundamental point the old observatory of Berne (), the current location of the Institut für exakte Wissenschaften of the University of Berne. In order to avoid errors during coordinate transmissions, the coordinates of this point are 600'000 m E / 200'000 m N. The 0 / 0 coordinate is located near Bordeaux, France. This definition invokes the following effects:

  • All coordinates are always positive, since Switzerland is located in the 1st quadrant of the coordinate system.
  • Furthermore, the whole area of Switzerland is located below the y=x line of the coordinate system. Thus, all E-coordinates are always bigger than N-coordinates.
  • Finally, the area is situated between 100 and 999 km both E and N, therefore all coordinates always contain - measured in meters - six digits.

Devised for the national land survey of 1995 (LV 95 for Landesvermessung 1995), the CH1903+ datum is based on WGS84. The coordinates of its new reference point, the Zimmerwald observatory, should maintain the CH1903 coordinates as far as possible. The easting and northing is increased by 2 mio/1 mio.

Coordinates of the Zimmerwald observatory in the old and new notations:
CH1903y = 602 030.68 mx = 191 775.03 m
CH1903+E = 2 602 030.74 mN = 1 191 775.03 m

External links


Geography of Switzerland | Geographic coordinate systems

Schweizer Landeskoordinaten | Schweizer Landeskoordinaten

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Swiss coordinate system".

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