Digimap Data refreshed in OS Data Download – August 2015

VectorMap Local centred on London TowerAs well as releasing DWG versions of OS Terrain™ 5 (vector) and OS MasterMap® Topography Layer Building Height Attribute, a number of other datasets have been updated to the most recent versions available from Ordnance Survey. All datasets are available to download using the Digimap Data Download application in the Ordnance Survey collection.

The table below lists the datasets that have been updated and includes the OS release date:

Product Name OS Release Date
OS MasterMap® Topography Layer June 2015
OS MasterMap® Integrated Transport Network™ (ITN) Layer June 2015
OS MasterMap® ITN™ Layer Urban Paths Theme July 2015
1:5o,000 Colour Raster June 2015
OS VectorMap® Local July 2015
OS VectorMap® Local Raster July 2015
Code-Point With Polygons July 2015
Open Names July 2015

 

The data product updates help page is kept up to date with all dataset updates in the Ordnance Survey collection.

If you have any questions about the dataset updates or Digimap please contact us:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

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Datasets updated in OS Roam – August 2015

OS MasterMap O2 arenaA number of datasets have recently been updated in Ordnance Survey Roam, the Digimap online mapping application, bringing them up to date with the most recent versions available from Ordnance Survey. All datasets are available to view using the Roam application in the Ordnance Survey collection.

The table below lists all the datasets that have been updated and includes the OS release date:

Product Name OS Release Date
OS MasterMap Topography Layer July 2015
1:25,000 Colour Raster June 2015
1:50,000 Colour Raster June 2015
VectorMap® Local July 2015
VectorMap® Local Raster July 2015

 

The data product updates help page is kept up to date with all dataset updates in the Ordnance Survey collection.

If you have any questions about the dataset updates or Digimap please contact us:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

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Land Cover Map 2007 now available in Vector format in Environment Download

Land Cover Map 2007 VectorWe are pleased to announce that the 2007 Land Cover Map of Great Britain, created by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH), is now available in vector format in the Digimap Environment Download service. The new dataset makes it easier for users to perform spatial analysis, such as proximity analysis and land use studies.

The data is available in ESRI Shapefile format, which can be read by most modern Geographic Information Systems, and is supplied on 100km x 100km tiles. Accompanying the data are ESRI Layer files which can be used to display the data using 23 classes based on the UK Biodiversity Action Plan (BAP) Broad Habitats in ESRI software.

The addition of the vector version brings the availability of the 2007 Land Cover Map in line with the 2000 Land Cover Map. A full list of formats available for the 2007 data is included below:

  • Vector, ESRI shapefile format
  • 25m raster, TIFF format
  • 1km raster , TIFF format

Further information about the Land Cover Map 2007 can be found on the CEH website.

If you have any questions about the dataset or any other part of the service then please get in touch:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

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Additional products now available in DWG format for CAD users

We are pleased to announce the release of DWG versions of both OS Terrain™ 5 (vector) and OS MasterMap® Topography Layer Building Height Attribute, which makes their use in CAD applications much easier and quicker.

Recently we have been working to produce DWG versions of the detailed vector dataset OS Terrain™ 5 and the popular Building Height Attribute component of OS MasterMap® Topography Layer. Both these datasets have proved popular with CAD users for detailed modelling applications but until now using them has proved time-consuming as many steps were required to convert them in to a format suitable for use in CAD applications.

OS Terrain 5 Vector

OS Terrain 5 Vector is dataset consisting of contour lines with five metre vertical spacing and spot heights (point features). The dataset also includes contours for mean high and low water around coastal areas, along with labels for both spot heights and contours.  OS Terrain 5 is the most detailed height dataset available from Ordnance Survey. A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) version is also available in ASCII grid format and can be downloaded through Digimap.

Building Height Attribute (BHA)

As with the other BHA datasets provided through Digimap the DWG version is supplied as a dataset of building polygons together with the building height attributes supplied by OS in the latest alpha release of their Building Height Attribute dataset (December 2014 at the time of writing). The DWG dataset is a 3D dataset which uses two of the height attributes supplied by OS to create the 3D features.  The base height of buildings is set using the value of the AbsHMin attribute and the roof height is defined by the AbsH2 attribute:

BHA Attributes

All height attributes supplied by OS, as indicated in the image above, are included as XDATA which can be readily viewed in CAD applications.

Note: the DWG BHA dataset is not supplied with a terrain surface so the building features will appear to float above the surface if it is displayed without a suitable terrain surface. We recommend using either OS Terrain 5 or OS Terrain 50, both of which can be downloaded from Digimap.

The image below shows OS Terrain 5 vector overlaid with BHA in AutoCAD 2015 for the area around Edinburgh Castle. Both datasets were supplied by Digimap in DWG format and required no manipulation or processing in order to display them.

OS Terrain 5 with Building Height Attribute

OS Terrain 5 vector and OS MasterMap BHA datasets are supplied on a 5x5km grid, so you may receive multiple multiple files if your area covers more than one 5km grid square.

We hope this makes it much easier to use the data and we welcome any feedback you may have.

  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk
  • Phone: 0131 650 3302

The County Surveys Search Engine

One of our key aims in building the interface for our collection was to allow people to explore and “play with” the data. It’s hard to get a sense of the extent of the series and the relationships between the surveys without some kind of overview: once you can see the surveys all together and look at them in different ways, it’s much easier to grasp their logic. So we wanted a tool that would aggregate all of the information we have gathered and then allow people to look at that information in flexible ways, to filter and explore it according to their interests.

Flexibility was also a priority in technical terms: we’re making this data available for the first time in this format, so we are aware that we don’t really know what people will want to do with it. We don’t see what we have done with the demonstrator as being the last word but rather the first. Based on this, we can start to understand the data better and start to understand how people might want to access it.  We expect to have to adapt the data and the ways of accessing it as we go along and we learn what we can most usefully provide to the community.

The Data

The process of gathering data has been described in another post, but from the demonstrator’s point of view what was important was to try to keep things as general and adaptable as possible. Nevertheless, this kind of historical data presents certain peculiarities and challenges. One of the most obvious is how to present the survey data. The surveys are arranged by county but the counties that were used are not the counties as they are today. Indeed, the counties used in the first and second phases of the county surveys are not the same. So we needed a mechanism which would allow people to make sense of the data without being restrictive. We’ve achieved this by providing a canonical list of counties taken from Ordinance Survey Data from the early 19th century. We then map this to the actual counties as surveyed. There’s not a perfect match here but we take a “permissive” view of the data – we’d rather show you slightly too much than too little. So the user gets presented with the canonical list in the search facility and we then map that to the county data to decide what to show. The same holds for the author data. We hold a canonical list of authors and map these to the real authors. This allows us to adjust the data in future as we discover more about it.

The Data Model

This mapping then gives rise to the data model. We have surveys which have a county associated with them. Then we have a list of counties which we present to the user which may map to more than one of the underlying counties. That can get a bit confusing but if we look at an example, it becomes clear. If we want to look at the surveys for Shetland then in the filter list we have “Zetland or Shetland” which is how it is listed in the Ordinance Surveys. In the first phase of the surveys, Shetland was included under “Northern Counties and Islands” but in the second phase it has a survey of its own. The implication of this for the data model is that we have to have a one-to-many mapping from entries in the search list to the entries in the surveys. In fact, the same county survey might appear under more than one search term e.g. the first phase “Northern Counties and Islands” needs to appear under Shetland, Orkney, Caithness and Sutherland. So we have to have a many-to-many mapping between the search counties in the interface and the counties as specified in the surveys themselves. To do this we adopt the standard database approach of having a mapping table i.e.ccounty_county

So ccounty is the list of counties as it appears in the search list and county is as they appear in the surveys and the mapping table allows us to relate these two to each other in any way we want. Each Survey can have many publications and each publication can be held in multiple places. This explains why we have separated out surveys from publications from holdings in the data model.

database schema

Database Schema (click to open in new tab)

This model might seem a little complex but it gives us a great deal of flexibility in how we handle counties and authors and makes it fairly easy to add new information about publications and holdings as it becomes available to us.

The Technology Chosen

In line with the ethos of flexibility, we decided to work with standard technology components. At the back end is a relational database. Sitting on top of that is a Web Application built using a standard MVC framework. This approach has advantages in terms of the flexibility but also in terms of getting up and running quickly. The MVC approach (Model-View-Controller) separates out the storage of the data (the Model) from the logic of the application (the Controller) and how the data is displayed (the View). This means that changing one part of it has less impact because it is isolated from the other components. A good example of this flexibility is the change we made to the interface which was covered in a previous post.

The MVC approach to web applications is one of the standard development techniques for web applications these days and when it comes to implementing this you have a wide choice of languages and MVC systems. In our case, it’s all written in Perl using Postgres for the DB with a Catalyst Application on top. So the application takes the standard Catalyst approach of using DBIx::Class to implement the Model and interface to the database and Template Toolkit for the front end. The choice of specific MVC implementation doesn’t matter so much – there are plenty to choose from! It’s really the flexibility this approach gives which is the main thing. Using standard technologies gives us the adaptability we need to be able to do this easily, so that we can get the data available and we can adapt to whatever changes come out of that down the line.

Evolution by Use

So this demonstrator gives people access to look at the data. We’re hoping people will find it helpful in “playing with” the data. But it’s very much the first draft. We expect it to evolve over time as we and any one else interested in the Surveys gets to know the data better and we start to understand more about how to make this data available to people.

Datasets updated in OS Data Download – June 2015

OS Terrain 5

OS Terrain 5 DTM with contours and spot heights

A number of datasets have been updated recently bringing them up to date with the most recent versions available from Ordnance Survey. All datasets are available to download using the Digimap Data Download application in the Ordnance Survey collection.

The table below lists all the datasets that have been updated and includes the OS release date:

Product Name OS Release Date
Points of Interest June 2015
1:25,000 Colour Raster June 2015
1:250,000 Colour Raster June 2015
1:50,000 Scale Gazetteer June 2015
Code-Point May 2015
Code-Point With Polygons May 2015
Code-Point Open May 2015
OS Terrain 5 DTM April 2015
OS Terrain 5 (contours) April 2015

 

The data product updates help page is kept up to date with all dataset updates in the Ordnance Survey collection.

Of particular note at this time is that Ordnance Survey have announced the withdrawal of the 1:50 000 Scale Gazetteer and OS Locator products following the release of OS Open Names in March 2015.

  • The last product update for 1:50 000 Scale Gazetteer will be June 2016.
  • The last product update for OS Locator will be May 2016

Following these releases Ordnance Survey will no longer supply, maintain or support the use of either OS Locator or 1:50 000 Scale Gazetteer.

If you have any questions about the dataset updates or Digimap please contact us:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

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County Surveys Search Tool Goes Live

We are delighted to announce that our bibliographic search tool is now live and accessible from the ‘Search‘ tab in the menu above.

Our demonstrator includes bibliographic data from some of the best collections of the surveys and, where possible, provides links to library catalogue entries and  digital editions. Researchers can search by modern county name, by series, by county and by author. Results are presented in a new tab after each search, so that you can compare multiple search results by toggling between pages. There are also detailed analyses of collections, revealing the extent of holdings and coverage, and indicating which surveys would be needed to complete each collection.

demonstrator2

 

We hope that the demonstrator will be a useful finding aid and discovery tool for those interested in the County Surveys, the history of statistical reporting and British history more broadly. We would welcome any feedback on the tool, and would be very keen to hear about how it is used or whether it could usefully offer other features and information. If you have ideas, please get in touch with us at edina@ed.ac.uk.

June 2015 dataset updates to OS Roam

OS VectorMap® Local Colour Raster

OS VectorMap® Local Colour Raster

A number of datasets have been updated in Ordnance Survey Roam, the Digimap online mapping application.

The table below lists all the datasets that have been updated and includes the OS release date:

Product Name OS Release Date
1:25,000 Colour Raster March 2015
1:50,000 Colour Raster March 2015
1:250,000 Colour Raster June 2015
VectorMap Local April 2015
VectorMap Local Raster April 2015

 

The data product updates help page is kept up to date with all dataset updates in the Ordnance Survey collection.

If you have any questions about the dataset updates or Digimap please contact us:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

Datasets updated in OS Data Download

OS 1:50,000 Colour Raster

OS 1:50,000 Colour Raster

May has been a busy month for data updates in OS Data Download. Not only have we released Points of Interest, Urban Paths and MasterMap Sites Layer, but a number of other datasets have also been updated.

The latest version of Boundary-Line includes new datasets for Welsh Wards, Historical Counties, and Ceremonial Counties. Plus the data is now available in TAB format which is great news for MapInfo users. You can read more about these changes in the separate blog post in the next day or two.

The table below lists all the datasets that have been updated and includes the OS release date:

Product Name OS Release Date
StreetView May 2015
1:25,000 Colour Raster March 2015
1:50,000 Colour Raster March 2015
MasterMap Sites Layer April 2015
VectorMap Local April 2015
VectorMap Local Raster April 2015
Boundary-Line May 2015
Locator May 2015

 

The data product updates help page is kept up to date with all dataset updates in the Ordnance Survey collection.

If you have any questions about the dataset updates or Digimap please contact us:

  • Phone: 0131 650 3302
  • Email: edina@ed.ac.uk

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EDINA Geo Services at GeoDATA London Showcase 2014

Early this month, EDINA Geodata Services held an exhibit at the GeoDATA Showcase 2014 event in London. This was our second time to exhibit at this event which is aimed primarily at the commercial end of the GI industry covering current data and technology topics. This follows on from other events in the series as described previously on the GoGeo Blog.

A summary of the talks can be found online.

We had a small stand, but the positive responses we got from visitors was very encouraging: from students who are currently using Digimap in their studies, to the lecturer in a university who said that Digimap was a great resource and essential to his teaching. Even more encouraging was the number of delegates and staff on other stands, with successful careers in the GI industry, who came up and said that they had used Digimap during their studies and it was a vital to their degree. It’s good to know that the future generations in the GI industry have the expectation that they will have easy access to high quality geospatial data, readily available from Digimap (at least while they are in education!).

We talked to delegates from a wide range of industries including environmental consultancies, government, data providers, local councils, defence and education as well as visiting and talking to many of the other exhibitors. We got a lot of useful feedback on what we’re doing and ideas for what we could be doing in the future including potential opportunities for collaboration. Of particular interest to delegates was the Fieldtrip GB app we were demonstrating which is a mobile data collection platform – especially once the magic word ‘free’ was mentioned, and also that there is an Open version available on Github.

Mince pies and mulled wine near the end were a welcome break from a long day, so busy that we didn’t actually get a chance to attend any of the talks, many of which looked very interesting, however it was a very useful event to attend. We look forward to next year’s event on the 3rd December 2015.