Joint colloquium on spatial and statistical data

At the joint colloquium by the Federal Statistical Office and swisstopo, speakers explored the intersection of spatial and statistical data, from the buildings and addresses register GWR/RegBL to using the topographic landscape model TLM for statistical analyses, and managing and disseminating metadata on geospatial data.
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March 15, 2026

Last friday, the Federal Statistical Office (FSO) and the Federal Office of Topography (swisstopo) held a joint colloquium on spatial and statistical data. The event was held at swisstopo in Wabern, but was also streamed and recorded.

The video of the colloquium is available online. Unfortunately, at least at the time of writing, swisstopo has made the recording available exclusively on YouTube and does not allow embedding.

In good Swiss tradition, the speakers alternate between French and German (reasonably subtitled, so translation to English works fine). The video includes:

I found the part about the data in the buildings and addresses register and the processes behind it, e.g. back-filling the GWR/RegBL particularly interesting. Unfortunately, there was only relatively little discussion in the Q&A session. Hopefully, we’ll see more successful collaboration in the data space in the future.

Footnotes

  1. Swisstopo’s topographic landscape model, the basis of swissTLM3D, a large-scale 3D vector dataset describing Switzerland’s landscape.↩︎

  2. “Geometadata” is used in some legal bases and standards to denote “metadata on geospatial data”. I don’t like this term. Granted, geospatial data does have some special metadata properties (maybe specifically those should be called “geometadata”, if anything, not all metadata on geodata). But so do biomedical data, meteorological data, and digital humanities data, without coming up with specific terminology as far as I’m aware.↩︎