Open in Digital Twin
The NSW Points of
Interest (POI) web service allows users to search for and identify the location
of features that people may want to see on a map, know about or visit. POI
features are derived from features maintained within multiple themes
of the NSW Foundation Data Framework (FSDF). The features included in the NSW
POI web service are: community, education, medical, recreation, transportation,
utility, hydrography, physiography and place. Community features
include ambulance stations, art galleries, cemeteries, convents/monasteries,
co-operatives, court houses, crematoriums, embassies, fire stations, gaols,
graves, homesteads, libraries, lighthouses, local government chambers, museums,
observatories, places of worship, police stations, post offices, nursing homes,
retirement villages, rural fire stations, SES facilities, shopping centres, and
tourist information centres. Education features
include combined primary-high schools, high schools, preschools, primary
schools, research stations, special schools, TAFE colleges, and
universities. Medical features
include general hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, children’s hospitals,
integrated health services, multi purpose services and community medical
centres. Recreation features
include athletics tracks, BMX tracks, camping grounds, caravan parks, clubs,
cycling tracks, dog tracks, golf courses, historic sites, lookouts, monuments,
motor racing tracks, observation towers, outdoor theatres, parks, picnic areas,
racecourses, ship wrecks, showgrounds, sports centres, sports courts, sports
fields, swimming pools, target ranges, tourist attractions, training tracks,
trotting tracks and zoos . Transportation
features include airports, boat ramps, named cable cars, marinas, railway
stations, slipways and transport interchanges. Utility features
include filtration plants, fuel driven power stations, gas facilities,
geothermal power stations, hydro power stations, rubbish depots, sewage works,
solar power stations, transmission stations and wind power stations. Physiography and
Hydrography include physiography: caves, cliffs, gaps / passes / saddles,
headlands, mountains hills / peaks, peninsulas / spits, or plateaus /
tablelands. Hydrography: named bays / inlets / basins, beaches, bores,
breakwaters, dam walls, islands, locks, manmade water bodies, natural water
bodies, reaches / river bends, reefs, rock awash, sandbars / shoals, springs,
swamps and waterfalls.Place Features
include cities, towns, suburbs, localities, regions and villages.Downloads: File Geodatabase
Layer Name
PointOfInterest3D
File Type
Hosted Scene Layer
Theme/s
Place Names, Cultural, Transport,
Administrative Boundaries, Positioning, Water, Physiography
Update Frequency
As Required
Contact Details
Contact is via the Spatial Services Customer Hub
Relationship to Themes and Datasets
Place Names, Transport, Cultural,
Water, Physiography Themes of the NSW Foundation Spatial Data Framework.
Accuracy
The dataset maintains a positional
relationship to, and alignment with, the state's topographic features
including natural, physical and cultural. It is divided into the four themes:
Cultural, Hydrography, Physiography and Transportation. Each of these themes
is made up of various Feature Classes (or layers) that contain the relevant
spatial data and their associated attributes and relationships. The data is
captured at a variety of scales and accuracy, ranging from 1:500 to 1:250 000
according to the National Mapping Council of Australia, Standards of Map
Accuracy (1975). Therefore, the position of the feature instance will be
within 0.5mm at map scale for 90% of the well-defined points. That is, 1:500
= 0.25m, 1:2000 = 1m, 1:4000 = 2m, 1:25000 = 12.5m, 1:50000 = 25m and
1:100000 = 50m. A program of positional upgrade (accuracy improvement) is
currently underway. Feature heights have been derived from LiDAR elevation
sources including 1m and 2m DEMs. The data used to create the DEMs have an
accuracy of 0.3m (95% Confidence Interval) vertical and 0.8m (95% Confidence
Interval) horizontal. The features vertical accuracy is also function of its
horizontal position.
Standards and Specifications
Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC)
implemented and compatible for consumption by common GIS platforms. Available
as either cache or non-cache, depending on client use or requirement.
Aggregators
Spatial Services | Department of
Customer Services
Distributors
Spatial Services | Department of
Customer Services
Dataset Producers and Contributors
Spatial Services | Department of
Customer Services
The data was created as part
of a Digital Twin ProjectSpatial Services NSW accepts no
responsibility for any errors, additions or omissions in the data and
provides no guarantees as to the usefulness, accuracy or timeliness
of data provided.