Product structure
Last updated
Last updated
OS MasterMap Water Network Layer is a topological network representing the watercourses within Great Britain. The product is made up of five feature types:
WatercourseLink: Features that represent the approximate central alignment of a watercourse, including rivers, lakes and canals. They can represent part of a watercourse or a whole watercourse.
HydroNode: Features that represent a river’s source, end, a junction where three or more links meet, and places where the real-world related attribution changes, for example, the point where a watercourse becomes tidal.
WatercourseSeparatedCrossing: Features to indicate the relationships between watercourses that intersect at different levels.
WatercourseLinkSet: Features to represent sets of links, for example, named rivers or watercourses within a catchment area.
WatercourseInteraction: Features that represent events along the water network, for example, weirs and mooring points.
Only two feature types are supplied in the current release of the product: WatercourseLink and HydroNode. This technical specification will cover all five of the feature types which make up the product as all five feature types are referenced in the product schema, which is the controlling specification for the product.
All the feature instances, of whichever feature type, are provided as a single FeatureCollection.
OS MasterMap Water Network Layer has been built with the INSPIRE Hydro – Network Specification as a basis, which results in the product inheriting attribution from INSPIRE. An overview of the product structure can be found in Figure 4, which highlights the inherited INSPIRE feature types and attribution.
Properties of the INSPIRE specification which are voidable and are not being populated in the product have not been included in the class diagrams or the following tables. For information on the INSPIRE properties which are not included in this product, please see the INSPIRE Data Specification on Hydrography – Network application schema.