Andorra la Vella Launches Advanced Economic Dashboard Tool
Local council develops digital platform integrating cadastral and business data for visual insights into parish commerce, aiding policy decisions.
Key Points
- Integrates cadastral data with tax records for shop details like type, size, occupancy, and sectors.
- Expands SIT with geolocation, business segmentation, vacancy analysis, and turnover rates.
- Aims to support commerce revitalization and transparent decision-making.
- Part of wider digitalization including 40 free procedures and upcoming digital certificates.
Andorra la Vella's local council is developing an advanced digital tool to provide a comprehensive overview of the parish's economic landscape. The platform will integrate cadastral data with business records, enabling users to access the information through intuitive, visual dashboards.
Building on the existing Territorial Information System (SIT)—equivalent to a Geographic Information System—the new tool expands public access already available via sit.andorralavella.ad/cadastre. That site allows residents to interact with interactive maps, clicking on parcels to view details such as total and built surface areas, property uses, and supplementary data for owners, including legal, topographical, and urban planning information.
The upgraded system links this with the council's internal tax management platform, delivering precise data on commercial properties. Users will be able to pinpoint shop locations, their types, sizes, activities, occupancy status, and sector classifications. It will also support geolocation of economic activities, segmentation by business type or seniority, and analysis of zonal activity patterns, vacant units, and turnover rates.
Council officials aim to use the tool for a holistic view of commerce, aiding decision-making on revitalization strategies and support policies. A second phase will introduce a public viewer on the council's website, offering basic data on shops and economic activities.
Marc Torrent, councillor for Digital Transformation and Sustainability, and Housing, described the SIT as an initial step to transform operations. It will streamline political and technical decisions with a "solid and reliable database", while enhancing administrative transparency and providing "objective and clear information".
This initiative forms part of broader digitalization efforts. The council has launched its electronic headquarters and a catalogue of around 40 free digital procedures. Focus now lies on digital certificates—the largest volume—which should be operational in coming weeks. Paid procedures will follow next year.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: