With multi-temporal analyses, Remote Sensing gives a unique perspective of how cities evolve. The key element for mapping rural to urban land use change is the ability to discriminate between rural uses (framing, pasture forest) and urban use (residential, commercial, and recreational). Remote Sensing method can be employed to classify types of land use over large areas in a practical, economical and repetitive fashion, over large areas. As an information management tool, GIS was originally a project-specific tool intended to deal with map-based physical application, such as tax mapping or surveying inventorying of utility networks running mainframes or minicomputers. Another important it is a fast moving and continuously developing technology. Future Remote Sensing and GIS software will be interoperable and web based. There will be no room left for specialist, standalone database system. And they are moving from ‘close’ to ‘open’ computing. This change has been set into motion because users want their corporate information system to handle any data regardless of the data’s complexity or sours, including spatial information.