From DHDN to ETRS89
Historically, Germany used the Deutsches Hauptdreiecksnetz (DHDN) paired with the Gauss-Krüger (GK) projection. DHDN was based on the Bessel 1841 ellipsoid. Because the Bessel ellipsoid does not share an origin with Earth's center of mass, DHDN coordinates differ from modern GPS (WGS84) by over 100 meters.
Today, Germany's official spatial reference system is ETRS89 (European Terrestrial Reference System 1989), specifically EPSG:4258. ETRS89 is tied to the stable part of the Eurasian tectonic plate, meaning coordinates do not constantly change from intra-plate motion (unlike WGS84, which drifts relative to Europe at roughly 2.5 cm/year).
The UTM Transition
Along with the shift to ETRS89, Germany replaced the Gauss-Krüger projection with UTM (Universal Transverse Mercator). Germany spans UTM Zones 32N and 33N. Cadastral and engineering data are now delivered in ETRS89/UTM.
Vertical Datum: DHHN2016
For heights, Germany uses the Deutsches Haupthöhennetz 2016 (DHHN2016), tied to the Normalhöhennull (NHN) reference surface. Converting from GPS ellipsoidal heights to DHHN2016 requires the national quasigeoid model (GCG2016). Using an older system like DHHN92 or NN (Normalnull) without exact transformations creates vertical errors that routinely trigger drainage and sewer engineering failures.
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