With the advent of
GPS technology, it became clear over the course of the 1980s that the LV03 coordinate system was no longer in a position to meet the rapidly growing precision standards set by new technologies. For instance, a difference of several meters was discovered when comparing the performance of LV03 and GPS technology in the measurement of the distance between the westernmost and easternmost areas of Switzerland (
Geneva and Lower
Engadin). As a result, the
Swiss Federal Office of Topography decided to launch a new land survey campaign in 1988, with the intention of gathering precise data for the development of a new coordinate system based on
WGS84. This survey ended in 1995, which is the reason why it was officially called LV95 (
Landesvermessung 1995, German for “land survey 1995”). The new coordinate system was designed with two main goals in mind: significantly increasing the precision of geographic coordinates, while at the same time preserving the conceptual foundations of the old LV03 for the sake of continuity. As such, the LV95 system continues to provide coordinates in the same order (East (E) before North (N)), and continues to allocate positive coordinates to every point of the Swiss territory. In order to nonetheless achieve a clear distinction between the two systems, an additional digit was added to the coordinates of LV95: any East coordinate (E) now starts with a 2, and any North coordinate (N) with a 1. Consequently, LV95 coordinates are given by pairs of 7-digit numbers, whereas LV03 used pairs of 6-digit numbers – for instance the coordinates (2 600 000m E / 1 200 000m N) in LV95 would be expressed as (600 000m E / 200 000m N) in LV03. Another significant difference lies in the location of the fundamental reference point of the two systems. Under the LV95 system, coordinates are no longer calculated by referring to the old observatory of
Bern (as was the case under the LV03 system), but instead to the
Zimmerwald Observatory, located outside of Bern (approximately 10 km to the South). Exact formulas used for the conversion of LV95 coordinates into latitude and longitude are provided by the
Swiss Federal Office of Topography in its formal documentation of the LV95 system. Although the new geographic coordinate system LV95 was introduced in 1995, it was only progressively brought to use by Swiss authorities, with the official deadline for its definitive implementation having been fixed for the year 2016. Nowadays the LV95 system has become the main geographic reference frame of various institutions and governmental agencies, such as the
Federal Statistical Office, the
Swiss Army and the
Swiss Border Guard, as well as cantonal police corps, emergency services and cadastre offices. Likewise, the official
National Maps of Switzerland are now also founded upon this new coordinate system. ==See also==