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I'm trying to downsample a raster then upsample it again.

I am using the gdalwarp function in QGIS.

When downsampling the raster looks OK in the front end, I set the cell size to 10x the original raster.

When upsampling back to the original cell size using the downsampled raster the original data seems to be preserved and I end up back at the original raster. What I'm expecting to happen is that I see blocks of 10x10 cells all with the same value (same as the downsampled raster).

Does QGIS preserve the original cell values?

Is there a way to perform this operation?

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    If you save the downsampled result into a new file with a new name and upsample that it would be a miracle if QGIS can find new details to the image.
    – user30184
    Commented May 8, 2015 at 9:19
  • Why use gdalwarp? Use for example the SAGA/Grid-Tools: resampling. This works fine.
    – RolandG
    Commented May 8, 2015 at 10:28
  • Why not? gdalwarp should work just as fine, or gdal_translate with -tr parameter.
    – user30184
    Commented May 8, 2015 at 11:24
  • If you use the nearest neighbour resampling method this should indeed work - and on my machine it does. Did you make sure to not accidentaly select the original raster as input in the dropdown menu when upscaling? Could you provide a small sample dataset so we can reproduce this error?
    – Kersten
    Commented May 8, 2015 at 12:40
  • Sounds like you're looking for the QGIS equivalent of ArcGIS' Block Statistics.
    – Chris W
    Commented May 9, 2015 at 0:11

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I'm hoping this fits your problem, I've found that r.resamp.stats functions the same as ArcGIS's block statistics

I just used it to calculate the mode of 5x5 cell blocks

Have a play around with that

Block statistics is really handy for determining things such as mean and mode

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