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An overview of terrain design

Available with 3D Analyst license.

  • Terrain workflow diagram
  • Designing a terrain dataset

Terrain creation entails specifying where the terrain will reside; what feature classes are involved; how they are involved; and other information related to vertical accuracy, performance, and storage. Before you start constructing a terrain, you need to gather the following information:

  • Where the terrain will physically reside
  • What the data sources are
  • How the data will be used to define the surface
  • Projection information including horizontal and vertical coordinate systems
  • Nominal/Average point spacing of the measurements
  • Accuracy or resolution requirements across a range of scales

Not every one of these has to be known with absolute certainty. The average point spacing and vertical accuracy requirements can be estimated if necessary. A known vertical coordinate system, while recommended, is not required. The ArcGIS 3D Analyst extension license is required to build a terrain dataset.

Terrain workflow diagram

The flow diagram below provides three overview steps involved in creating a new terrain dataset.

  1. Data conversion—Convert the source data contributing to the terrain dataset into feature classes within a geodatabase.
  2. Product generation—Determine how each feature class will contribute to the terrain dataset.
  3. Surface integration—Establish how the terrain surface will be displayed by adding levels of detail (pyramid levels) to the surface.
Terrain Workflow Diagram

Designing a terrain dataset

The general process for initially designing a terrain dataset is relatively straightforward:

StepsLinks for more information

1. Identify the set of data sources you will use to create your terrain dataset and how the source data will be organized.

See Types of source data supported in terrain datasets and Organizing terrain data in a geodatabase.

2. For each data source, specify what the source for the z measurements will be. For example, specify whether the z-values will come from the vertices (x,y,z coordinates) or from an attribute field of the feature.

See Height source and 2D versus 3D.

3. Define the role that each data source will play in your terrain dataset (its SFType).

See Types of feature class data sources in terrains.

4. Define the pyramid type (z-tolerance or window size), the number of pyramid levels, and scale range for each pyramid level.

See Pyramids.

Designing a terrain dataset

When creating a terrain, you can use either the New Terrain wizard inside ArcCatalog or geoprocessing tools from the 3d Analyst Toolbox's New Terrain toolset. The wizard is best for interactive use. The geoprocessing tools are best used in scripts or models. To edit the schema of an existing terrain, you need to use geoprocessing tools. To edit measurements you can either use geoprocessing tools or standard feature edit tools in ArcMap.

Related Topics

  • What is a terrain dataset?
  • Best practices for building terrain datasets
  • Updating and editing terrain datasets
  • Importing terrain dataset source measurements
  • Building a terrain dataset using the New Terrain wizard
  • Building a terrain dataset with geoprocessing tools
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