Addressing - Part 2: Assigning and maintaining addresses for objects in the physical world (ISO/FDIS 19160-2:2023)

Scope of the proposed deliverable
This document focuses on assigning and maintaining addresses that allow the unambiguous determination of an object in the physical world for purposes of identification and location in the context of public administration and public service delivery. During assignment an address is first associated with a particular object in the physical world. During maintenance the address changes, e.g., it is re-assigned to a different object, one or more of the address components are modified (e.g. a street name change), or the address is retired when it is no longer used. This document
—   establishes an overall set of objectives for assigning and maintaining addresses;
—   specifies the principles for assigning and maintaining addresses;
—   specifies a good practice for assigning and maintaining addresses; and
—   specifies a governance framework for assigning and maintaining addresses;
Very often local governments (e.g. municipalities) are assigned the mandate for the planning, implementation, evaluation, and ongoing maintenance of addresses, and they are often supported by other organizations, such as national government, private sector companies and national or regional organizations. This document is of relevance and applicable to all these organizations who have an interest, role or responsibility in address assignment and maintenance, such as
—   developing legislation, policies or regulations for addressing;
—   facilitating and coordinating the naming of address components (the constituent parts of an address) and announcing and communicating these names;
—   installing address component signs in the physical world;
—   designing and implementing business processes related to address assignment and maintenance;
—   designing, implementing and maintaining access to address data;
—   developing software to facilitate the above; and
—   using addresses.

Adressierung - Teil 2: Zuteilung und Pflege von Objektadressen in der physischen Welt (ISO/FDIS 19160-2:2023)

Titre manquant

Naslavljanje - 2. del: Dodeljevanje in vzdrževanje naslovov za objekte v fizičnem svetu (ISO/FDIS 19160-2:2023)

General Information

Status
Not Published
Public Enquiry End Date
09-Jan-2023
Technical Committee
Current Stage
5020 - Formal vote (FV) (Adopted Project)
Start Date
31-Aug-2023
Due Date
19-Oct-2023

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SLOVENSKI STANDARD
oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
01-januar-2023
Naslavljanje - 2. del: Dodeljevanje in vzdrževanje naslovov za objekte v fizičnem
svetu (ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022)
Addressing - Part 2: Assigning and maintaining addresses for objects in the physical
world (ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022)
Adressierung - Teil 2: Zuteilung und Pflege von Objektadressen in der physischen Welt
(ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022)
Titre manquant
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: prEN ISO 19160-2
ICS:
03.240 Poštne storitve Postal services
35.240.69 Uporabniške rešitve IT pri IT applications in postal
poštnih storitvah services
oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023 en,fr,de
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.

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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023

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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
DRAFT INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
ISO/DIS 19160-2
ISO/TC 211 Secretariat: SIS
Voting begins on: Voting terminates on:
2022-10-24 2023-01-16
Addressing —
Part 2:
Assigning and maintaining addresses for objects in the
physical world
ICS: 35.240.70
This document is circulated as received from the committee secretariat.
THIS DOCUMENT IS A DRAFT CIRCULATED
FOR COMMENT AND APPROVAL. IT IS
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PROVIDE SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION. © ISO 2022

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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
DRAFT INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
ISO/DIS 19160-2
ISO/TC 211 Secretariat: SIS
Voting begins on: Voting terminates on:

Addressing —
Part 2:
Assigning and maintaining addresses for objects in the
physical world
ICS: 35.240.70
This document is circulated as received from the committee secretariat.
COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
THIS DOCUMENT IS A DRAFT CIRCULATED
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© ISO 2022
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NATIONAL REGULATIONS.
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ii
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PROVIDE SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION. © ISO 2022

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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Conformance . 5
5 Notation . 8
5.1 Identifiers . 8
6 Overview . 8
7 Good practice for assigning and maintaining addresses.10
7.1 General . 10
7.2 Principles .13
7.2.1 Addressing principles . 13
7.2.2 Address data principles . 17
8 Governance framework for assigning and maintaining addresses .18
8.1 General . 18
8.2 Addressing stakeholders . 19
8.3 Processes . 20
8.3.1 Addressing processes. 21
8.3.2 Address data processes . 22
Annex A (normative) Abstract test suite .24
Annex B (informative) Examples of objectives for assigning and maintaining addresses .34
Annex C (informative) Examples of addressing in different countries.39
Annex D (informative) Conformance test report: Australia and New Zealand .40
Annex E (informative) Conformance test report: Addresses for addressable facilities
(Address of Things) in the Republic of Korea .56
Annex F (informative) Conformance test report: Denmark .69
Annex G (informative) Conformance test report: Abu Dhabi Emirate, UAE .81
Annex H (informative) Conformance test report: Granular postcodes – case study from
Egypt .97
Annex I (informative) Conformance test report: South African Post Office rural addressing .110
Annex J (informative) Conformance test report: City of Beijing, China .119
Bibliography . 127
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out
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ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular, the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of ISO documents should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2 (see www.iso.org/directives).
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details of
any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or
on the ISO list of patent declarations received (see www.iso.org/patents).
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and
expressions related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to
the World Trade Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see
www.iso.org/iso/foreword.html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 211, Geographic information/Geomatics.
A list of all parts in the ISO 19160 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www.iso.org/members.html.
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
Introduction
An address is structured information that allows the unambiguous determination of an object for
purposes of identification and location (ISO 19160-1:2015). The objects exist in the physical world
(i.e., virtual objects are excluded) and can be outdoor (e.g., a building) or indoor (e.g., an office inside a
building).
Addresses provide one of the most common ways to locate and identify an object in the physical world.
They are essential for the management of cities, for governance and public administration generally, for
service delivery in the public and private sector, and they can give people status or (legal) identity in
society. They also play an important role in detecting emerging hotspots and clusters of infected cases
during an epidemic or pandemic. Yet, in many parts of the world, addresses do not exist or are poorly
maintained, and even if they exist, corresponding address data is often lacking or incomplete. Many
stakeholders are involved in address assignment and maintenance, including local governments, postal
operators, geographic naming councils, people who live or work at an address, and users of addresses,
such as banks, local and national governments, e-commerce, and service providers for utilities,
deliveries and emergency response.
This standard specifies how to plan, implement and maintain addresses and corresponding address data
in order to gain maximum benefits for governance and society in the long run. The aim of this standard
is to facilitate the design, planning and implementation of address assignment and maintenance
by specifying requirements and recommendations for objectives, principles, good practice and a
governance framework for assigning and maintaining addresses based on international good practice.
Where regional or national standards already exist, this standard can complement them.
This standard supports the first goal of the United Nations Global Geospatial Information Management
(UN-GGIM) Integrated Geospatial Information Framework (IGIF) (http://ggim.un.org/), namely,
enabling geospatial (address) information governance, policy and institutional arrangements that
ensure effective geospatial (address) information management, accommodate individual organizational
requirements and arrangements, and that are aligned to national and global policy frameworks.
This standard supports the Universal Postal Union’s initiative, “Addressing the World – An Address for
Everyone”, which promotes the establishment of national addressing infrastructures to the benefit of
all. The standard is also useful for those involved in slum upgrading, as addresses are often assigned
when housing conditions in settlements are being improved.
In many Euro-centric countries, reference to a road network in the address is common, while addresses
in countries such as Japan comprise a hierarchy of administrative areas without reference to a
thoroughfare. In countries with vast tracts of land, an address can comprise only a place name or the
name of an oasis in a desert. Therefore, this standard does not intend to promote uniform addresses
across the world; it specifies good governance and management practices for any kind of address
so that challenges related to address assignment and maintenance can be resolved consistently and
sustainably. The requirements and recommendations in this standard are aimed at upholding a long
lasting addressing infrastructure that meets today’s needs for addressing, but can also be used by
future generations.
This standard is part of the multi-part ISO 19160 standard on addressing:
— ISO 19160-1:2015, Addressing – Part 1: Conceptual model, defines a conceptual model for address
information (address model), together with the terms and definitions that describe the concepts in
the model.
— ISO 19160-3:2020, Addressing – Part 3: Address data quality, establishes a set of data quality elements
and measures for describing the quality of address data; describes procedures for reporting data
quality; and provides guidelines for the use of the established set of data quality elements and
measures for describing the quality of address data.
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
— ISO 19160-4:2017, Addressing – Part 4: International postal address components and template
language, defines key terms for postal addressing, postal address components and constraints on
their use.
— ISO 19160-6, Addressing – Part 6: Digital interchange models, is currently under development. It
specifies a set of data models suitable for machine encoding of address information.
The preparatory work for this standard recommended a project on good practices for address
assignment schemes. This part of ISO 19160 implements this recommendation, albeit under a modified
titled.
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
DRAFT INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
Addressing —
Part 2:
Assigning and maintaining addresses for objects in the
physical world
1 Scope
This document focuses on assigning and maintaining addresses that allow the unambiguous
determination of an object in the physical world for purposes of identification and location in the
context of public administration and public service delivery. During assignment an address is first
associated with a particular object in the physical world. During maintenance the address changes, e.g.,
it is re-assigned to a different object, one or more of the address components are modified (e.g., a street
name change), or the address is retired when it is no longer used. This standard
a) specifies a good practice for assigning and maintaining addresses and address data; and
b) specifies a governance framework for assigning and maintaining addresses and address data.
Very often local governments (e.g., municipalities) are assigned the mandate for the planning,
implementation, evaluation, and ongoing maintenance of addresses, and they are often supported
by other organizations, such as national government, a postal agency, private sector companies and
national or regional organizations. This standard is of relevance and applicable to all these organizations
who have an interest, role or responsibility in address assignment and maintenance, such as
— developing legislation, policies or regulations for addressing;
— facilitating and coordinating the naming of address components (the constituent parts of an address)
and announcing and communicating these names;
— installing address component signs in the physical world;
— designing and implementing business processes related to address assignment and maintenance;
— designing, implementing and maintaining access to address data;
— developing software to facilitate the above; and
— using addresses.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content
constitutes requirements of this standard. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For
undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 19105:2021, Geographic information — Conformance and Testing
ISO 19160-1:2015, Addressing — Part 1: Conceptual model
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, all the terms and definitions given in ISO 19160-1:2015 and the
following apply.
1
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
ISO and IEC maintain terminology databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at https:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1
address
structured information that allows the unambiguous determination of an object for purposes of
identification and location
EXAMPLE 1 Address where the object is a business: 611 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10022.
EXAMPLE 2 Address where the object is a building: Lombardy House, 809 Lombardy Street, The Hills, 0039,
South Africa.
EXAMPLE 3 Address where the object is a land parcel for a building: San 4–5, Munjae-ro, Songpa-gu, Seoul,
13144, South Korea.
EXAMPLE 4 Address where the object is a building group, such as a school or large apartment area: 228-dong
404-ho, 26 Kyunghee-daero, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul 130–701, South Korea.
Note 1 to entry: The object is identifiable in the real world, i.e. electronic and virtual addresses are excluded.
Note 2 to entry: “Identification” refers to the fact that the structured information in the address unambiguously
determines the object, i.e. it helps the human to identify the object. In other words, “identification” here does not
refer to unique identifiers in a database or dataset.
Note 3 to entry: There can be many addresses for an object, but at any moment (or lifecycle stage), an address
unambiguously determines a single object.
Note 4 to entry: Two addresses from two different address classes (3.4) (i.e. they have different sets of components)
for the same addressable object (3.2) are two different addresses.
Note 5 to entry: Two addresses for the same addressable object and from the same address class, but in two
different languages are two different addresses (refer to Annex E for more examples).
Note 6 to entry: In addition to the addressable object, there may be a multitude of people, organizations,
addressees or other objects associated with an address. These are external to the address model.
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.1]
3.2
addressable object
object that may be assigned an address (3.1)
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.2]
3.3
address assignment method
way in which addresses are assigned according to the rules of an address reference system (3.10)
3.4
address class
description of a set of addresses that share the same address components (3.5), operations, methods,
relationships, and semantics
EXAMPLE 1 “25 Blue Avenue Hatfield 0028” and “384 Green Street Motherville 2093” are from the same
address class.
EXAMPLE 2 “PO Box 765 Goodwood 33948” and “PO Box 567 Grayville 98373” are from the same address
class.
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.4]
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
3.5
address component
constituent part of the address (3.1)
Note 1 to entry: An address component may reference another object such as a spatial object (e.g. an
administrative boundary or a land parcel) or a non-spatial object (e.g. an organization or a person).
Note 2 to entry: An address component may have one or more alternative values, e.g. alternatives in different
languages or abbreviated alternatives.
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.5]
3.6
address data management system
system concerned with the organization and control of address data
Note 1 to entry: Adapted for use in the addressing (3.7) domain from ISO/IEC TR 10032:2003, 2.30.
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC TR 10032:2003, 2.30, modified]
3.7
addressing
activities involving addresses
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.6]
3.8
addressing infrastructure
fundamental facilities, services, systems and installations that provide a country, city or area with
addresses required for the functioning of society
3.9
addressing stakeholder
individual, group of people or organization with an interest, or with a role or responsibility in the
governance framework (3.13) for address assignment and maintenance
EXAMPLE 1 A citizen (individual) or an organization has an interest in the address for their place of residence
or business to be included in a municipal dataset.
EXAMPLE 2 A community (group of people) has an interest in the names assigned to streets in their suburb.
EXAMPLE 3 A municipality (organization) has the responsibility to assign or maintain addresses within its
area of jurisdiction.
EXAMPLE 4 A private sector service provider who maintains address data on behalf of a municipality.
Note 1 to entry: Adapted for use in the addressing (3.7) domain from ISO/PAS 19450:2015, 3.65.
[SOURCE: Adapted from ISO/PAS 19450:2015, 3.65, modified]
3.10
address reference system
defined set of address components (3.5) and the rules for their combination into addresses
Note 1 to entry: The address assignment method (3.3) creates addresses according to the rules of the address
reference system.
[SOURCE: ISO 19160-1:2015, 4.8, modified — Note 1 to entry has been added]
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
3.11
emergency management
overall approach for preventing emergencies and managing those that occur
Note 1 to entry: In general, emergency management utilizes a risk management approach to, preparedness,
response and recovery before, during and after potentially destabilizing events and/or disruptions.
[SOURCE: ISO 22300:2018, 3.78]
3.12
good practice
method that has been proven to work well and produce good results, and is therefore recommended as
a model
Note 1 to entry: Methods or techniques described as good practice have usually been tested over time and
validated, in the broad sense, through repeated trials before being accepted as worthy of adoption more broadly.
Note 2 to entry: A good practice is typically derived from practitioners who work in a specified field, e.g., in the
assignment and maintenance of addresses and address data, after it has been proven in practice.
Note 3 to entry: Even though a good practice is only recommended as a model, if it is followed, then some parts
or aspects of it may be required. Therefore, the requirements specified for a good practice in this document are
conditional requirements, i.e. they are required only if the good practice is followed.
[SOURCE: ISO 14055-1:2017, 3.1.3, modified — Notes 2 and 3 to entry have been added]
3.13
governance framework
strategies, policies, decision-making structures and accountabilities through which
addressing stakeholders (3.9) assign and maintain addresses in a sustainable manner
EXAMPLE Citizens have an interest in addresses and are therefore addressing stakeholders, but they may
not have any accountabilities in the governance framework.
Note 1 to entry: Not all addressing stakeholders are assigned tasks and responsibilities in the governance
framework.
Note 2 to entry: The requirements specified for a governance framework in this document are conditional
requirements, i.e. they are required only if a governance framework is implemented.
Note 3 to entry: Adapted for use in the addressing (3.7) domain from ISO/IEC TR 38502:2017, 3.1.
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC TR 38502:2017, 3.1, modified]
3.14
interoperability
capability to communicate, execute programs, or transfer data among various functional units in a
manner that requires the user to have little or no knowledge of the unique characteristics of those units
[SOURCE: ISO 19101-2:2018, 3.17]
3.15
profile
set of one or more base standards or subsets of base standards, and, where applicable, the identification
of chosen clauses, classes, options and parameters of those base standards, that are necessary for
accomplishing a particular function
EXAMPLE The South African national standard for address data exchange, SANS 1883-2:2018, is a profile of
ISO 19160-1:2015, Addressing – Part 1: Conceptual model. It specifies a selection of clauses, classes and options
from ISO 19160-1:2015 to be used for the exchange of address data in South Africa.
Note 1 to entry: A profile is derived from base standards so that by definition, conformance to a profile is
conformance to the base standards from which it is derived.
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oSIST prEN ISO 19160-2:2023
ISO/DIS 19160-2:2022(E)
[SOURCE: ISO 19106:2004, 4.5, modified — An EXAMPLE has been added]
3.16
public service
work, information, a commodity or utility that is provided to the general public to add value
EXAMPLE Running water, post (mail), sewage, refuse collection, electricity, emergency response.
Note 1 to entry: Adapted from SANS 1883-1:2009 and Avis (2016).
3.17
service delivery
interaction between a provider and a client where the provider offers a service
EXAMPLE 1 Many governments are providers of public services, such as running water, electricity and
emergency response.
EXAMPLE 2 “In order to support the concept of the single postal territory of the Union, member countries shall
ensure that all users/customers enjoy the right to a universal postal service involving the permanent provision
of quality basic postal services at all points in their territory, at affordable prices.” (UPU, 2018).
Note 1 to entry: Good service delivery provides clients with an increase in value. The provision of sufficient,
affordable and quality basic services is considered a core function of governments. Service delivery, e.g., water,
sanitation, waste management and housing, correlates closely with the health and well-being of citizens.
Note 2 to entry: Adapted from Avis (2016).
4 Conformance
This standard defines two conformance classes for the respective specification targets in Table 1. An
objective, good practice or governance framework for assigning and maintaining addresses claiming
conformance with this
...

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