I was visiting Sa Pa, Vietnam, and navigating with Organic Maps. I was looking for a street that would bring me back to the city center. I could not see any on OSM or Google Maps. I walked for a while and was able to see a street that led in the right direction. It turns out that it connected to another street that brought me where I wanted to go. This made me realize how much of the useful info
I was visiting Sa Pa, Vietnam, and navigating with Organic Maps. I was looking for a street that would bring me back to the city center. I could not see any on OSM or Google Maps. I walked for a while and was able to see a street that led in the right direction. It turns out that it connected to another street that brought me where I wanted to go. This made me realize how much of the useful information in maps depends on people walking, running, or commuting through those streets. You cannot see these kinds of streets from satellite images. You can only know them, but knowing them, you may not use GPS tracking to record them. I think this leaves only runners and anyone who likes walking to discover most of the streets that are not currently on the map.
কাতিলা দারুস সালাম ক্বওমী মাদরাসা রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার নিচু কাতিলা এলাকায় অবস্থিত একটি পরিচিত ক্বওমী ধর্মীয় শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান। মাদরাসাটি নাগা বাজারের উত্তর পাশে অবস্থিত এবং নাগা বাজার থেকে আনুমানিক ১২০০ মিটার দূরত্বে অবস্থান করছে, যা স্থানীয় সড়ক ও পায়ে চলাচলের মাধ্যমে সহজেই পৌঁছানো যায়। প্রতিষ্ঠানটি আশপাশের গ্রামগুলোর শিক্ষার্থী ও ধর্মপ্রাণ মানুষের কাছে সুপরিচিত।
এই ডায়ের
কাতিলা দারুস সালাম ক্বওমী মাদরাসা রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার নিচু কাতিলা এলাকায় অবস্থিত একটি পরিচিত ক্বওমী ধর্মীয় শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান। মাদরাসাটি নাগা বাজারের উত্তর পাশে অবস্থিত এবং নাগা বাজার থেকে আনুমানিক ১২০০ মিটার দূরত্বে অবস্থান করছে, যা স্থানীয় সড়ক ও পায়ে চলাচলের মাধ্যমে সহজেই পৌঁছানো যায়। প্রতিষ্ঠানটি আশপাশের গ্রামগুলোর শিক্ষার্থী ও ধর্মপ্রাণ মানুষের কাছে সুপরিচিত।
এই ডায়েরি এন্ট্রিতে মাঠ পর্যায়ে যাচাই (ground survey) ও স্থানীয় তথ্যের ভিত্তিতে মাদরাসাটির সঠিক অবস্থান, নাম ও প্রাসঙ্গিক ট্যাগ যাচাই করে OpenStreetMap–এ সংযোজন/হালনাগাদ করা হয়েছে। এর মাধ্যমে নিচু কাতিলা, নাগা বাজার ও পার্শ্ববর্তী এলাকার শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান সংক্রান্ত ভৌগোলিক তথ্য আরও নির্ভুল ও ব্যবহারযোগ্য হবে বলে আশা করা যায়।
The OSM Apps Catalog presents existing apps based on OSM data.
I have plans to redesign the OSM Apps Catalog. In particular, I want to make the landing page and the detailed view of the apps more accessible to a wider audience.
To understand what this needs, I have created a survey. Please fill it out and share your pers
I have plans to redesign the OSM Apps Catalog. In particular, I want to make the landing page and the detailed view of the apps more accessible to a wider audience.
To understand what this needs, I have created a survey. Please fill it out and share your perspective with me. I would be very grateful if you could forward the survey to people who are not particularly interested in technology. This perspective is especially important to me.
importreimportpandasaspdreq=requests.get("https://overpass-api.de/api/interpreter?data=%5Bout%3Axml%5D%5Btimeout%3A25%5D%3B%7B%7BgeocodeArea%3AKöln%7D%7D-%3E.searchArea%3Brel%5B%22admin_level%22~%229%22%5D%28area.searchArea%29%3Bout%20meta%3B")src=pd.read_csv("https://www.offenedaten-koeln.de/sites/default/files/Stadt_K%C3%B6ln_Statistischer_Datenkatalog_1.csv")yy=XXXXXXXXXXXX.split("\n\n")z=""foryinyy[1:]:y1=re.search("ref = ([0-9]+)",y).group(1)tdf=src[src.S_RAUM==int(y1)]new_pop_v=int(tdf.A0025A.iloc[0])srcattrib="Stadt Köln (2025) - Amt für Stadtentwicklung und Statistik - Informationsservice: https://www.offenedaten-koeln.de/dataset/statistischer-datenkatalog-köln (Stadt_Köln_Statistischer_Datenkatalog_1.csv dl-de->by-2.0)"y=re.sub(" population = [0-9]+",f" population = {new_pop_v}",y)y=re.sub("source:population = .+\n",f"source:population = {srcattrib}\n",y)z+=y+"\n\n"z+=f"changeset\n source = {srcattrib}"
Panama Canal Authority–Supported Open Data Initiative
Background and Context
The Los Chorros de Ciri basin, located west of Panama City, is a hydrologically and socially important watershed that supports rural communities while contributing to regional water security. In recognition of this dual importance, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) funded a high-resolution mapping project focuse
Panama Canal Authority–Supported Open Data Initiative
Background and Context
The Los Chorros de Ciri basin, located west of Panama City, is a hydrologically and socially important watershed that supports rural communities while contributing to regional water security. In recognition of this dual importance, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) funded a high-resolution mapping project focused on community-oriented outcomes and long-term public benefit.
This project represents a shift away from closed, single-purpose GIS deliverables toward open geospatial data that can support community planning, environmental stewardship, and collaborative mapping initiatives.
Project Objectives
The mapping effort was designed around the following goals:
Generate high-accuracy base mapping of the Los Chorros de Ciri basin using drone photogrammetry
Identify and document community presence within the watershed
Release derived GIS products for public and open-source use
Data Acquisition and Processing
Drone Photogrammetry Surveys
Multiple drone missions were conducted in early September 2025, covering discrete but adjacent blocks within the basin. The surveys achieved consistent, high-resolution coverage suitable for both environmental and community-scale mapping.
Key characteristics of the datasets include:
Area coverage exceeding 9 square kilometers across all survey blocks
Ground sampling distance between 4 and 5 centimeters
Full image reconstruction for all flights
Dense point clouds exceeding hundreds of millions of points per block
These datasets were processed using WebODM Lightning and generated orthophotos, digital surface models, and digital terrain models suitable for GIS analysis and mapping.
Accuracy and Quality Control
Survey accuracy was evaluated using GPS and 3D error metrics derived during processing. Reported results indicate:
Horizontal accuracy (CE90) generally below 0.6 meters
Vertical accuracy (LE90) generally below 0.7 meters
Stable reprojection errors and consistent feature reconstruction across blocks
These accuracy levels support reliable mapping of buildings, paths, waterways, and land-use features within the basin.
Community Mapping Focus
A core outcome of this project was the explicit identification of community features that are often underrepresented in national or commercial datasets. These include:
Rural housing clusters
Informal access roads and footpaths
Agricultural clearings
Local watercourses influencing daily life
By deriving vector data from high-resolution orthophotos and terrain models, the project enables communities to be more accurately represented in shared geospatial platforms.
Open Data and Public Release
All derived GIS products from this project were explicitly cleared for public release. This enables their use for:
Community mapping and participatory planning
Integration into open platforms such as OpenStreetMap
Academic and NGO research
Watershed management and disaster preparedness
The decision to release these datasets reflects a broader commitment to open data principles and public value.
Reflections
The Los Chorros de Ciri project demonstrates that professional-grade GIS workflows can serve both institutional needs and community interests. By prioritizing openness and reuse, the project helps ensure that publicly funded geospatial data contributes to shared knowledge, transparency, and long-term community benefit.
I am proposing a major initiative to “ratify” and enhance the military fortification data on OpenStreetMap. This project actually began with a very specific personal goal: identifying and submitting newly discovered nodes for the UKBOTA (UK Bunkers On The Air) scheme.
UKBOTA is a fantastic amateur radio award program that encourages the “activation” of historical bunkers and pillboxes. W
I am proposing a major initiative to “ratify” and enhance the military fortification data on OpenStreetMap. This project actually began with a very specific personal goal: identifying and submitting newly discovered nodes for the UKBOTA (UK Bunkers On The Air) scheme.
UKBOTA is a fantastic amateur radio award program that encourages the “activation” of historical bunkers and pillboxes. While searching for sites to submit to their database, I realized that while many valid sites exist in specialized archaeological records, our coverage on OSM is often incomplete, misplaced, or lacks the specific metadata (like precise coordinates and typology) required for schemes like UKBOTA. This led me to a broader vision: cross-referencing our map with high-quality datasets—specifically the Extended Defence of Britain (eDoB) database.
The Vision
I have been in discussion with Matt Aldred, the lead developer of the eDoB Online viewer, about bridging his extensive research with our global map. The eDoB database is an evolution of the original Defence of Britain project, offering corrected coordinates, Lidar verification, and specific structural classifications.
By aligning these datasets, we don’t just help the radio community; we create a professional-grade, ratified record of these historical assets for everyone. With tens of thousands of potential nodes to process, doing this entirely by hand would be a nightmare. Therefore, I am proposing a structured bulk import and data enrichment project, conducted in full compliance with the OSM Import Guidelines.
Integration with Wikidata
A key part of this project involves strengthening the link between OpenStreetMap and Wikidata. Many significant fortifications already have entries in Wikidata, but the “connective tissue” between the two is often missing.
* I intend to add https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:wikidata tags to OSM nodes where a corresponding entry exists.
* Where appropriate, I will look into creating or updating Wikidata items with eDoB references to ensure the semantic web of historical data is as robust as possible.
The Methodology: Import & Verification
I intend to seek formal approval from the OSM community for a bulk data merge. However, a “blind” import is not the goal; the objective is to maintain human oversight using modern mapping tools:
Bulk Import (with Approval): I plan to draft an import proposal on the OSM Wiki to merge eDoB data into OSM. This would focus on adding missing structures and “ratifying” existing ones by aligning coordinates with Lidar-verified data.
MapRoulette: To handle the scale of this project, I will create challenges to allow the community to quickly review “matches” between eDoB and OSM nodes, ensuring we don’t create duplicates and that Lidar data matches the aerial imagery.
StreetComplete: For on-the-ground verification, I want to explore using StreetComplete-style quests. This would allow local surveyors to confirm if a pillbox is “extant” (still standing), which is a vital piece of information that external databases can’t always guarantee.
Proposed Tagging Schema
I am proposing a specific tagging schema based on established OSM military tagging:
Key
Value (Example)
Description
military
bunker
Primary classification.
bunker_type
pillbox
Specific subtype.
pillbox_type
FW3/24
The specific British War Office design type.
ref:edob
12345
A unique reference ID linking back to the eDoB database.
wikidata
Q1234567
Link to the persistent Wikidata item.
source
eDoB;Lidar
Acknowledging the data origin.
Next Steps & UKBOTA Collaboration
My ultimate goal is a “virtuous circle” of data:
1. Import/Ratify: Bring high-quality eDoB data into OSM.
2. Verify: Use MapRoulette and StreetComplete to confirm the sites are still there.
3. Contribute Back: Use this ratified OSM data to identify “new” sites that meet the criteria for the UKBOTA database, providing the amateur radio community with a steady stream of new activation targets.
Next Actions:
Community Consultation: I will soon reach out to the UK OSM community and the tagging mailing list to discuss the ref:edob tag and import logic.
Licensing Review: Ensuring the eDoB data is fully ODbL-compatible is my top priority.
Wiki Proposal: I will be setting up a formal project page on the OSM Wiki to document the process.
UKBOTA Outreach: Working with the UKBOTA team to see how verified OSM data can best be formatted for their system updates.
By combining the power of bulk data with the precision of community tools, we can make OpenStreetMap the definitive resource for 20th-century defensive history. I’d love to hear from anyone who has experience with large-scale “ratification” projects or an interest in UK coastal defences.
কাতিলা সরকারি প্রাথমিক বিদ্যালয় রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার কাতিলা গ্রামে অবস্থিত একটি সরকার পরিচালিত প্রাথমিক শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান। বিদ্যালয়টি নাগা বাজারের নিকটবর্তী হওয়ায় এটি শুধু কাতিলা গ্রামের নয়, আশপাশের এলাকার শিশুদের জন্যও একটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ শিক্ষাকেন্দ্র হিসেবে পরিচিত। স্থানীয় জনগণের দৈনন্দিন যাতায়াত ও বাণিজ্যিক কেন্দ্র নাগা বাজারের কাছাকাছি অবস্থানের কারণে বিদ্যালয়টিতে শিক্ষার্থীদ
কাতিলা সরকারি প্রাথমিক বিদ্যালয় রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার কাতিলা গ্রামে অবস্থিত একটি সরকার পরিচালিত প্রাথমিক শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান। বিদ্যালয়টি নাগা বাজারের নিকটবর্তী হওয়ায় এটি শুধু কাতিলা গ্রামের নয়, আশপাশের এলাকার শিশুদের জন্যও একটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ শিক্ষাকেন্দ্র হিসেবে পরিচিত। স্থানীয় জনগণের দৈনন্দিন যাতায়াত ও বাণিজ্যিক কেন্দ্র নাগা বাজারের কাছাকাছি অবস্থানের কারণে বিদ্যালয়টিতে শিক্ষার্থীদের আসা–যাওয়া তুলনামূলকভাবে সহজ।
এই বিদ্যালয়ে সাধারণত শ্রেণি ১ থেকে ৫ পর্যন্ত পাঠদান কার্যক্রম পরিচালিত হয় এবং বাংলা মাধ্যমের সরকারি প্রাথমিক পাঠ্যক্রম অনুসরণ করা হয়। বিদ্যালয়টি প্রাথমিক শিক্ষা অধিদপ্তরের আওতাভুক্ত এবং সরকার নির্ধারিত নীতিমালা অনুযায়ী শিক্ষাদান ও প্রশাসনিক কার্যক্রম পরিচালনা করে। এখানকার শিক্ষকেরা শিশুদের মৌলিক শিক্ষা, নৈতিক মূল্যবোধ এবং সামাজিক আচরণ গঠনে গুরুত্বপূর্ণ ভূমিকা পালন করে থাকেন।
OpenStreetMap-এ কাতিলা সরকারি প্রাথমিক বিদ্যালয়ের অবস্থান যুক্ত করার মূল উদ্দেশ্য হলো নাগা বাজার এলাকার শিক্ষা অবকাঠামোকে আরও দৃশ্যমান করা এবং মানচিত্র ব্যবহারকারীদের জন্য সঠিক ও হালনাগাদ তথ্য প্রদান করা। এই তথ্য সংযোজনের মাধ্যমে শিক্ষার্থী, অভিভাবক, স্থানীয় বাসিন্দা এবং গবেষকেরা বিদ্যালয়ের অবস্থান সহজে খুঁজে পেতে পারবেন, যা এলাকার শিক্ষা ও সামাজিক অবকাঠামোর ডিজিটাল নথিভুক্তকরণে সহায়ক
@NagaBazar/diary/408001/edit
So it is almost the end of the year, I thought what if I created a summary blog of what I did.
In Hungary:
I’m only doing small edits in my neighborhood if some changes happen
Outside of Hungary:
Had a small “let’s map Europe” thing, and added forest/farmland land cover/land uses to several countries (Lithuania, Greece, Switzerland, Finland, Germany, Austria, Republic of Cyprus)
So it is almost the end of the year, I thought what if I created a summary blog of what I did.
In Hungary:
I’m only doing small edits in my neighborhood if some changes happen
Outside of Hungary:
Had a small “let’s map Europe” thing, and added forest/farmland land cover/land uses to several countries (Lithuania, Greece, Switzerland, Finland, Germany, Austria, Republic of Cyprus)
And also mapped in some U.S. states, main focus on West Virginia (finally finished it after almost 5 years of mapping: June 2020 till Feb 2025 - read diary entry here: @ottwiz/diary/406073) and Pennsylvania, where I clean up the huge multipolygon mess after some users not taking enough care broke a huge 1k sq km big multipolygon.
So this led me to start fixing up. Of course my goal is to map the forest cover of Pennsylvania as much as possible but it’s a way harder task than West Virginia was. Quality-wise, I try to make the quality of it better than it was, so more accurate and more aligns to the imagery than it’s just a roughly drawn something. (Of course if the terrain is rough, i compare the imagery with other services’ available for OSM)
Other than that, I mapped other states a bit as well like Washington, Alaska, Virginia, Texas just to name a few, but not all of them.
DBSN (DataBase di Sintesi Nazionale) is a database containing the most significant territorial information in Italy. It is developed by IGM (Istituto Geografico Militare) and is available in ODbL, as stated on its website. For reference, here’s the DBSN page on OSM wiki.
Since municipality borders in Italy were updated last time in 2001 using ISTAT (Istituto Nazionale di Statistica) data
DBSN (DataBase di Sintesi Nazionale) is a database containing the most significant territorial information in Italy. It is developed by IGM (Istituto Geografico Militare) and is available in ODbL, as stated on its website. For reference, here’s the DBSN page on OSM wiki.
Since municipality borders in Italy were updated last time in 2001 using ISTAT (Istituto Nazionale di Statistica) data, and since these are open data, I think it’s time to update everything in the right way.
With the help of dsantini’s very useful scripts, I will download boundaries data for one province at a time (starting in Abruzzo, my home region), and then I will continue in alphabetic order.
This project will start on Dec 2025/Jan 2026. I really don’t know how much it will take me, there are 7’896 municipalities in Italy.
Here’s how I will work:
download boundaries data for the whole province
opening them in JOSM
in order to preserve history/chronology, I will modify existing boundary lines/ways modifying nodes position and adding nodes when/where needed
[1] rtnf has developed WD-NearbyItem, an OpenStreetMap-based web app to display the Wikidata items around a location.
bmaczero has setup a MapRoulette task to fix multi-pitch tennis courts in the US.
Malle Yeno shared his 2025 OSM mapping activities in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, ranging from StreetComplete surveys, street-level imagery collection, pavement (sidewalk) mapping, and indoor mapping, to maintaining the city’s OSM Wiki page and proposing new OSM tags.
Pieter Vander Vennet explained the current complexity and problems with the existing road crossing tagging scheme on OpenStreetMap and called on the community to improve it together.
rphyrin shared the thoughts he had when wearing an OpenStreetMap-based t-shirt.
SilvEsth blogged that YouthMappers UMSA Bolivia have participated in mapping the Senda Verde Wildlife Sanctuary, in the Amazon rainforest of Bolivia, and the Puma Katari public transportation network in the city of La Paz.
Local chapter news
The OpenStreetMap US December 2025 newsletter has been published.
OpenStreetMap US recounted several of their notable moments of 2025.
OSM research
Zijian Hu and others have used OpenStreetMap data to estimate network-wide road traffic flow in 15 cities across Europe and North America. You can access the full article published in Communications in Transportation Research.
OSM in action
Astrid has won► first prize in the recent GNU/Linux.ch Advent giveaway, a Purism Librem 5 smartphone, by correctly solving the puzzle and submitting an OpenStreetMap-themed short story.
Open Data
fghj753 reported that the Estonian government is planning to make their open aerial imagery less detailed after criticisms from several homeowners over privacy concerns.
Software
The CoMaps team shared the progress they made in 2025, how it was enabled by its active, all-volunteer community, and how you can help too.
Bastian Greshake Tzovaras has released the comaps-map-distributor command-line tool to help users download and locally distribute the map files used by the CoMaps Android app.
Daniel Schep shared what has recently changed in Ultra, a web application made to simplify making maps with MapLibre GL JS.
The openstreetmap-website project has some new year gifts for users of the OSM website, including linked tag references in changeset comments and emojis in vector map layers.
The BBBike Extracts Service now supports the column-orientated data format GeoParquet, as well as vector tile packages in the Shortbread schema in MBTiles format, for custom regions on request.
Programming
Anatoly Alizar has tested► GeoDesk’s GOB OSM data storage format in practice.
Releases
CoMaps has released version 2025.12.19. In addition to fresh OpenStreetMap data from 17 December 2025, the new features on Android include better warnings about outdated maps when trying to edit OSM and the ability to specify your own remote server for downloading maps.
Did you know that …
… ‘OpenStreetMap New Zealand’ has a tool for restoring the history of features that have been deleted and then redrawn?
Other “geo” things
jnally, of Spatial Source, noted that the rare alignment of true north, magnetic north, and grid north in Great Britain (we reported earlier) is coming to an end and is not expected to occur again for several centuries.
Adam Cox is the software designer for the OldInsuranceMaps.net site, which provides an open and online workflow for creating georeferenced layers of historical maps, especially those from the Sanborn Map Collection (from the US Library of Congress). Sanborn was an American cartography company that was prominent in the 19th and 20th centuries. Many websites and web maps use OldInsuranceMaps.net’s resources, such as the OpenHistoricalMap.
CBS News Colorado reported that a plane has made a safe emergency landing without the pilot’s help, in what appears to be the first real-world use of Garmin’s ‘Autoland’ emergency system.
Terence Eden, the developer behind the OpenBenches project, highlighted a number of wholesome comments left by users in their bench entries on the platform.
Upcoming Events
Country
Where
Venue
What
When
Hamburg
CCH – Congress Center Hamburg
OSM@39c3
2025-12-27 – 2025-12-30
New Delhi
online
OSM India×TomTom Online Mapathon
2025-12-28
Braga
Mercado Municipal de Braga
OSM Braga meetup / mapathon
2026-01-03
MAP Mercator museum
OpenStreetMap Belgium at the MAP-Mercator museum
2026-01-03
Braunschweig
Stratum0
Braunschweiger Mappertreffen im Stratum0 Hackerspace
2026-01-03
नई दिल्ली
Jitsi Meet (online)
OSM India – Monthly Online Mapathon
2026-01-04
Missing Maps London: (Online) Mapathon [eng]
2026-01-06
iD Community Chat
2026-01-07
Stuttgart
Stuttgart
Stuttgarter OpenStreetMap-Treffen
2026-01-07
MapYourGrid webinar: Data quality in OpenStreetMap for energy system planning
2026-01-08
Dresden
Bottoms Up, Dresden
OSM-Stammisch Dresden
2026-01-08
Bochum
Das Labor, Alleestraße 50, Bochum
OSM-Treffen in Bochum
2026-01-08
Online
OpenStreetMap Midwest Meetup
2026-01-08
OSMF Engineering Working Group meeting
2026-01-09
Jitsi-Meet
Erstes Online-Treffen der OSM-Mapper:innen im Sauerland
2026-01-09
Chiasso
Mapping party @ New Year’s brunch by Wikimedia CH
2026-01-10
København
Cafe Bevar’s
OSMmapperCPH
2026-01-11
Missing Maps : Mapathon en ligne – CartONG [fr]
2026-01-12
臺北市
MozSpace Taipei
OpenStreetMap x Wikidata Taipei #84
2026-01-12
Note:
If you like to see your event here, please put it into the OSM calendar. Only data which is there, will appear in weeklyOSM.
In June 2025 I got a heat pump installed in my 3 bedroom semi-detached house built in 1900. I thought I’d document the process as it may be of interest to others, particularly some aspects of the heat pump sizing and installation of the underfloor heating, which on discussing with some people they found quite… Continue reading Heatpump install
In June 2025 I got a heat pump installed in my 3 bedroom semi-detached house built in 1900. I thought I’d document the process as it may be of interest to others, particularly some aspects of the heat pump sizing and installation of the underfloor heating, which on discussing with some people they found quite interesting and useful.
I started the discussion with the local installer, Rewneable Heat, about a year before, and it took much back and forth via email with some phone calls and a couple of site visits to get the retrofit all designed. As I’d done the basic heat survey in a spreadsheet myself, they were able to use this as a starting point and saved them having to come out and do all the measurements.
We moved into the property 2 years before the install, and on moving in discovered there was an issue with the thin kitchen radiator leaking at the valves, so had to isolate it quickly as no easy way to fix it properly, combined with knowing we were going to install the heat pump which would require radiator upgrades, so no point installing something to be taken out within a couple of years. There was also no insulation above the kitchen at all, so within the first year I installed some sheep’s wool insulation called Thermafleece from Celtic Renewables, which made a noticeable improvement to the warmth in the kitchen.
The gas combi-boiler was over a decade old. By the time it came to install time of the heat pump we were starting to have reliability issues with the boiler. For example it had an odd setup for taking the condensate away, where there was a small container with a water level activated pump, which would pump the water to the drain. This pump was starting to run constantly in some cases. The system was also losing pressure, which meant that I frequently needed to top up the pressure but couldn’t see where the leak was.
A family member works for Mitsibushi in the heat pump department in Livingston (where they make the heat pumps), so going for a Mitsibushi seemed a no brainer. The local installer we chose didn’t normally use that brand, but were happy to go with it.
The heat loss survey suggested that we needed 6.9 kW, however looking at historical gas smart meter data for the coldest day over the previous couple of years suggested the maximum gas used over any hour was less than 6kWh, typically just over 5kWh, thus the heat loss survey was potentially over estimating the heat power we needed. Heat loss surveys over estimating the power needed is a known issue, as they take a bit of a worst case scenario with the amount of heat loss, and are unable to take account of some of the characteristics of the building which could mean there’s less heat loss compared to the calculation. There’s also some additional fabric or insulation improvements we can do to help reduce the heat loss, thus reducing the heat demand required. For example, we’ve recently had a water leak, which turned out to be the flat roofs about the bedrooms being end of life and needing replacing, with the replacement also including insulation (none before).
The cupboard that had the gas boiler is where the new hot water tank plus electrical sub board got installed. The Mitsubishi 170 litre slimline pre-plumbed cylinder just fitted in, and was likely the largest Mitsubishi hot water tank that would fit. It was a tight fit, and the installers did a neat job getting it all fitted in.
Most radiators were upgraded to larger radiators to allow a low flow temperature, and therefore more efficient system. Two of the radiators that weren’t upgraded were borderline needing upgraded to a larger size, however were difficult to do so due to the position and space available. We may come back and change them in the future, but thought we’d see how we get on first. With one of them, insulating the flat roof above should help (still to do), and would probably be the priority, which should reduce the heat loss and therefore heat requirements in that room. It’s also got the washing machine and tumble dryer, so when it’s cold there are other heat sources likely on too, reducing some of the need for a larger radiator.
In the kitchen we got the installer to remove the thin leaking radiator, capping the pipes in the ceiling. This was replaced with underfloor heating. The heating installer came in early week 1 to install the underlay and underfloor heating pipes. We then had just under a week to get most of the tiles stuck down, particularly in the cupboard that the new hot water cylinder would be installed. The installer used an insulated board with pre-cut grooves for the underfloor heating pipes. We then used the tile adhesive directly on the boards and pipes with the tiles on top, making it an easy process. The hardest part was trying to get the tiles level everywhere.
3 doors needed to have the bottom trimmed off due to the extra floor height. Easy enough done with the circular saw.
No concrete screed was needed, which puts the room completely out of use until it’s dry. It’s also quite costly and time consuming to install the concrete screed. With this backer board solution we could strategically lay the tiles to keep use of the kitchen whilst being careful where we stepped and leaning over at times.
Week 2 the main part of the install took 5 days, starting on the Monday.
Day 1 was mostly removing the old gas boiler, draining the system, and preparation work. The concrete base stands for the heat pump were created. The new electrical sub board for the heat pump was installed, with the house power off for a short time to connect this in. Once the boiler was out in the morning we had no water from the hot taps.
We headed across the road to the swimming pool for a swim, and shower in the evening. Rather handy having a swimming pool so close to home and a monthly pass. With the gas boiler out, I emailed Octopus Energy to start the process to remove the gas meter.
Day 2 was implementing the pipework changes and hanging some of the radiators that were changing. The external pipes and electrical cables were put in place, but not connected up.
Day 3 most of the radiators were hung by the end of the day, and the hot water tank was filled and connected up. The heat pump was moved into place and linked up. The hot water tank was filled (but not heated yet), so we could get water from the hot tap again. We were rather impressed that the pressure on the hot and cold taps was now equal, whereas with the combi boiler the hot water at the taps was noticeably lower pressure.
Day 4 was getting the system up and running, checking for leaks, bleeding radiators, learning the controls, connecting the heat pump to Melcloud (Mitsibushi’s cloud service), and then running the system overnight to start commissioning. With it being so warm, it was hard to keep the heat pump going all the time (on reflection, using a different mode from weather compensation, such as target flow may have worked better). With it being mostly new radiators, and the system being mostly clean anyway, it wasn’t too much of an issue. Once the heat pump was linked up to MelCloud I could also link the heat pump up to my Home Assistant install which runs on a Raspberry Pi. This meant I could record some details such as flow, return, and outside temperatures.
Day 5 was finishing up the install, flushing the system and re-filling it, putting the thermostats in place, and completing the insulation of the pipes. As they were doing that they spotted a minor leak on the small ball valves to one of the radiators that wasn’t changed, so replaced those with straight pipe. My kids spotted that the smaller kids bedroom had a bigger radiator and found it strange, however this is expected due to the extra external wall, thus greater heat loss in the smaller room.
The warranty for the Mitsibushi heat pump needs the paperwork submitted by the home owner rather than the installer as with other manufacturers. This was an easy process with the only hickup being that they could couldn’t find the serial number I entered on the form. They kindly asked for a photo via email and 3 weeks later I had an email confirming the manufacturer’s warranty. This was different to other heat pump manufacturers that our installer use where the installer submits the warranty documentation and passes it on to the customer.
The EPC was completed the following Friday evening, organised by the heat pump installer. It was a quick process as the installer had passed on the install details, so it was a case of verifying and taking photos of the relevant details.
The EPC went from a mid E to a high D, only just missing out on the C rating by one point. Some more insulation, solar PV, and a battery should get that improved further.
With the EPC stating that we’ve got the heat pump, and the invoice, I could then send off to Home Energy Scotland for the funding payment having started the application process prior to the works starting (very important). The payment came through within a week or two, so was pretty quick, I was then able to pay this on to the heat pump installer.
The basic energy monitoring on the Mitsubishi isn’t particularly accurate, and is rounded to the down to the whole kWh. So I added a Shelly EM with a CT clamp to get some more accurate and live monitoring, and connected it up to Home Assistant.
A week after the install of the heat pump was completed, an Octopus engineer came and removed the gas meter, and capped the gas supply. Another week later and my account was updated that the meter was removed and final bill produced and sent a few days after that.
I found the pure weather compensation and dumb thermostat hasn’t worked so well, as it’s hard to find an exactly optimum heating curve, for example when it’s wet and windy I found a slightly higher flow rate was needed. I also got annoyed with the hot water occasionally heating up during the Octopus Agile peak time, so have setup Havenwise, which uses the energy tariff and weather to optimise the heating. This has produced a much more stable temperature, as it’s able to lower the flow temperature when approaching the set temperature, and raise it for example when the back door has been left open and let the cold air in, thus getting back to temperature much quicker compared to pure weather compensation. It reduces some of the cycling I seen in some weather conditions if I didn’t have the weather compensation right for that wind and rain condition. Having a cap of 45˚C flow temperature in the Havenwise system has really helped to avoid too high a temperature, and massively overshooting the target temperature. The design flow temperature is 45˚C at -5.6˚C.
So far, comparing our total energy costs to the previous year for each month has shown that we are saving some money. The original quote suggested we’d be roughly similar cost to before, so a small reduction in cost whilst getting a warmer house with better hot water is a lovely quality of life improvement. Still have the coldest months to go, to really tell how well it will work.
To confirm my direct debit for energy is set right I take the previous 12 months cost and divide it by 12, and can then tweak the direct debit also taking account of the current balance. At the point of the install in June the total prior year cost was £180 per month. Now at the end of December we’re at £153 per month. We’re on the Octopus Agile tariff and use Havenwise to time the hot water by the heat pump for the times that are cheapest, and set appropriate flow temperatures based on heat demand.
আজ আমি রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার কাতিলা গ্রামে অবস্থিত নাগা বাজার এলাকায় মাঠ পর্যায়ের পর্যবেক্ষণ (field survey) পরিচালনা করি। নাগা বাজার–মৌলভীবিভা সড়ক দিয়ে চলাচলের সময় লক্ষ্য করি যে, প্রধান সড়কের পাশে একটি গ্রামীণফোন সেলুলার টাওয়ার স্থাপিত রয়েছে, যা এখনো OpenStreetMap-এ সঠিকভাবে চিহ্নিত ছিল না।
মাঠ পর্যায়ে অবস্থান নিশ্চিত করার পর আমি টাওয়ারটির সঠিক লোকেশন নির্ধারণ করি এবং OpenStreetM
আজ আমি রাজশাহী জেলার বাগমারা উপজেলার কাতিলা গ্রামে অবস্থিত নাগা বাজার এলাকায় মাঠ পর্যায়ের পর্যবেক্ষণ (field survey) পরিচালনা করি। নাগা বাজার–মৌলভীবিভা সড়ক দিয়ে চলাচলের সময় লক্ষ্য করি যে, প্রধান সড়কের পাশে একটি গ্রামীণফোন সেলুলার টাওয়ার স্থাপিত রয়েছে, যা এখনো OpenStreetMap-এ সঠিকভাবে চিহ্নিত ছিল না।
মাঠ পর্যায়ে অবস্থান নিশ্চিত করার পর আমি টাওয়ারটির সঠিক লোকেশন নির্ধারণ করি এবং OpenStreetMap-এ একটি নতুন পয়েন্ট (node) যোগ করি। ম্যাপিংয়ের সময় টাওয়ারটির ধরন, অপারেটর ও নেটওয়ার্ক তথ্য যাচাই করে যথাযথ ট্যাগ ব্যবহার করেছি, যেমন—communications_tower, operator=Grameenphone এবং tower:type=cellular।
এই টাওয়ারটি নাগা বাজার এলাকার মোবাইল নেটওয়ার্ক কভারেজ নিশ্চিত করতে গুরুত্বপূর্ণ ভূমিকা রাখছে। স্থানীয় ব্যবসা প্রতিষ্ঠান, বাজারের দোকানদার ও আশপাশের বসতবাড়ির মানুষ প্রতিদিন এই নেটওয়ার্কের উপর নির্ভরশীল। তাই টাওয়ারটির অবস্থান ম্যাপে যুক্ত হওয়ায় ভবিষ্যতে ডিজিটাল ম্যাপ ব্যবহারকারী, গবেষক ও জরুরি সেবাদানকারী সংস্থার জন্য তথ্যটি উপকারী হবে বলে আমি মনে করি।
গ্রামীণ এলাকার গুরুত্বপূর্ণ অবকাঠামো OpenStreetMap-এ যুক্ত করার মাধ্যমে স্থানীয় এলাকার ডিজিটাল দৃশ্যমানতা বাড়ানো সম্ভব। ভবিষ্যতেও নাগা বাজার ও আশপাশের এলাকায় রাস্তা, শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান ও অন্যান্য গুরুত্বপূর্ণ স্থাপনা ম্যাপিং করার পরিকল্পনা রয়েছে।
Location: Naga Bazar,Katila, Bagmara Upazila, Rajshahi
Source: Field survey
Mapped features: Mobile communication tower (Grameenphone)
I am going to make some improvements to the Walla Walla Washington area over the next week. I’ve just found the Rapid editor uses the Microsoft Building Footprint data to suggest features. That’s excellent. Speeds things up significantly.
I am going to make some improvements to the Walla Walla Washington area over the next week. I’ve just found the Rapid editor uses the Microsoft Building Footprint data to suggest features. That’s excellent. Speeds things up significantly.
Today while looking at the hand drawn parcel maps that the county provides I learned the creek that runs through my neighborhood has changed it’s name. On the maps it’s called Sulphur Spring Creek. On all the other maps I’ve seen, road signs, and from what we locals call it, it’s just Sulphur Creek. There’s even a nature center / animal rescue that is named for the creek. They don’t use the spri
Today while looking at the hand drawn parcel maps that the county provides I learned the creek that runs through my neighborhood has changed it’s name. On the maps it’s called Sulphur Spring Creek. On all the other maps I’ve seen, road signs, and from what we locals call it, it’s just Sulphur Creek. There’s even a nature center / animal rescue that is named for the creek. They don’t use the spring in their name either.
OK… after getting the comment re sulfurous springs, I did some digging. I haven’t found any historic proof of the claim in this article from last year, but …
“Nestled in the Hayward hills, the Sulphur Creek Nature Center is home to dozens of birds, amphibians, reptiles and mammals, including a coyote and a fox. The site straddles a small section of Sulphur Creek, named after the sulphur water bubbling up from nearby springs. In 1970, H.A.R.D. acquired the property, then a wellness retreat, and transformed it into the animal sanctuary it is today.”
The “spring” part of the creek is shown to be at the current location of the nature center. The other creeks that feed into it have been conflated into all being “Sulphur Creek” I suppose.
在中国大陆,OSM 要素的缺失是众所周知的事实。然而,具体的缺失程度如何?哪些要素相对完善、哪些要素更加稀少?“一片空白”的区域又主要分布在哪里?当前,社区对此的认识大多是定性的,少有具体的数据支撑。自己动手,丰衣足食。为此,本文旨在尝试构建一种定量化的评价指标,用于界定某个地区的“空白”程度,比较不同类型要素的缺失程度,此即该地区 OSM 要素的完备性。
然而,何为“完备”实际上是非常主观的判断,对于相同的地理区域,不同需求的数据使用者可能会有不同的判断。例如,一个城市的路网和公共交通被绘制得十分详尽,或是植被和用地类型被划分得尤其清晰,就足够“完备”了么?对 POI 有兴趣的数据使用者可能不会这么觉得。然而,调查的进行仍是需要一个标准,那怕是比较粗断的标准。
思考过后,本文决定将“完备”的定义对象设定在中国大陆具有一定工商业活动和人口聚集规模的最小行
在中国大陆,OSM 要素的缺失是众所周知的事实。然而,具体的缺失程度如何?哪些要素相对完善、哪些要素更加稀少?“一片空白”的区域又主要分布在哪里?当前,社区对此的认识大多是定性的,少有具体的数据支撑。自己动手,丰衣足食。为此,本文旨在尝试构建一种定量化的评价指标,用于界定某个地区的“空白”程度,比较不同类型要素的缺失程度,此即该地区 OSM 要素的完备性。
然而,何为“完备”实际上是非常主观的判断,对于相同的地理区域,不同需求的数据使用者可能会有不同的判断。例如,一个城市的路网和公共交通被绘制得十分详尽,或是植被和用地类型被划分得尤其清晰,就足够“完备”了么?对 POI 有兴趣的数据使用者可能不会这么觉得。然而,调查的进行仍是需要一个标准,那怕是比较粗断的标准。
思考过后,本文决定将“完备”的定义对象设定在中国大陆具有一定工商业活动和人口聚集规模的最小行政单位——乡、镇和街道等——所应当存在的设施,如道路、学校、医院、建筑等,设定由行政节点和边界、道路交通、公共和商业设施、建筑和土地利用四个维度构成的 OSM 基础要素“完备度”评价指标。这些基础要素既与当地居民的日常生活息息相关,亦与不同绘图者的兴趣有所重合,希望能给各位社区同好寻找补充目标提供小小帮助。
此项工作由个人一时兴起完成,思虑不周之处,还请各位海涵。本文展示的是此项工作的先期结果,涵盖中国大陆 27 个省/市/自治区中的 9 个。后续工作倘若顺利预计会在农历新年前后完成。待全部工作完成以后,本文使用的脚本、示例及数据将会以 GPL-3.0 协议共享于 GitHub,有相关兴趣的读者可以自行取用。报告本身欢迎以 CC BY 4.0 协议转载 。如有不当之处,敬请通过评论和私信指出,我会尽量及时更正。
乡级行政中心通常集中了整个区划范围内最多的人口和基础设施,应当作为 OSM 要素和公众兴趣点最多的区域
比较未被普遍标注的乡级行政边界,乡级行政中心的位置容易界定,周边区域范围较小,统计难度较低
具体地,考虑中国大陆普通乡镇的规模,本文将周边区域限定在行政中心所在节点的 1 km 和 3 km 之内,前者用于搜寻人口密集区所需要的建筑、居民道路、医院、学校和商店等设施,后者则用于搜寻可能里行政中心更远的政府机关、大型道路和各种用地类型等。对于行政中心所在坐标,根据 中国大陆地区行政区划标注指北 的建议,其在 OSM 应以 place=suburb 或 place=town 标注,因此本文的想法是通过 overpass 接口对齐进行匹配。然而,由于存在 place 节点未被标记,或 name 标签中名字不清晰的情况,完全依赖 OSM 获取乡镇列表及其坐标显然是不合适的。为此,本文将 GitHub 上存档的 2024 年中国全国 5 级行政区划 列表作为参考,使用 overpass 接口尝试匹配 OSM 数据库中相应的节点并从中获取行政中心的位置信息。对于未能匹配到相应节点的乡镇,则由其他地理信息平台(如高德 API)补充其行政中心的位置信息。
在中国大陆,乡级行政区划涵盖街道、镇、乡、民族乡、苏木、民族苏木及县辖区共 8 种类型,但在这 8 种“由民政部门确认的单位”之外,中国大陆还存在数量可观的“类似乡级行政单位”,如开发区、产业园、农场、林场、牧场、兵团等,即俗称的“黑区”。考虑到乡镇级的此类“黑区”在 OSM 中被准确标注的情况寥寥,同时部分“黑区”还可能涉及敏感内容,本文会将其排除在统计范围之外。具体的排除方法则以行政代码为准,即剔除掉列表中乡级行政代码为 400–999 的条目,存在行政代码和下辖单位的县级及以上黑区则予以保留。
“基础要素”在本文中是指被纳入统计标准的,应当被标记的各类 OSM 要素,数据类型包含节点、路径和关系。考虑到是在乡镇水平上的统计,以及中国大陆各乡镇现实的标注情况,本文认为“基础要素”的选取既要考虑其内容的普遍性,同时标准还不能设立得太高 (全是零分的话就没有意义了)。因此,本文的设计思路是:对于中国大陆内陆地区的普通乡镇,里面有什么要素是普遍存在,且当地居民、外地访客、研究学者会共通关注的?基于这个标准,本文目前能想到的有如下内容:
考虑到县道及以上等级的公路并不一定会抵达乡镇的中心区域,甚至不一定会连接到每个乡镇,上述设施的搜索范围主要设定为 3 km,且并未要求一定存在。另外,由于乡镇中心附近的居民道路对于当地居民有更重要的意义,同时也是为了鼓励将乡镇的 place 节点放在建成区中心的做法,1 km 以内的小型道路被赋予了额外的权重。
可见,这样的满分标准对于中国大陆的普通乡镇来说还是挺高的,但对于大部分中小城市来说又非常地低——然而真的如此么?各位观众可以事先预期下心目中的“满分”地区有没有达到这一标准。另外要事先说明的是,这样的“满分”不代表该地区的 OSM 要素真的满足了一般公共地图对于“完备”的要求,更不代表其是社区公认的“完备”标准。如果有读者对上述标准有所疑问或是建议,欢迎在评论区和私信进行讨论。
江苏整体的要素完备度仅次于广东,虽然没有如深圳这样面积小又精的地级市,但胜在面积较大的苏南各市下辖乡镇都有不错的完备水平。和广东的情况类似,江苏各市的行政关系和道路交通都较为完备,缺少的是公共和商业设施以及建筑和用地类型。值得称道的是,当地 OSM 爱好者的日常维护使得位于苏北的宿迁市市辖区有明显超出周边地区的完备水平。江苏急需补充的地区主要是苏中、苏北各县的下辖乡镇。
吉林整体的要素完备度也和全国平均水平相近,但内部差异较甘肃更大。朝鲜族聚居的延边、白山的完备度水平接近苏南、浙北各市,随后是长春、吉林两大城市。然而,吉林的中部、西部地区,如白城、四平、松原等,其乡镇则严重缺少行政关系、建筑、用地和 POI ,“空白”区域连绵成片。
3.2.7 山西省
山西整体的要素完备度较甘肃、吉林又低了一挡,区别在于山西没有成片的、完备度较高的区域,全省各市的完备度相对均匀地偏低。各市的人口密集区完备度都尚可,人口密集区外的乡镇则都接近“空白”,因此决定平均水平的是各市下辖的县乡行政区数量。具体到各市,阳泉市因其较小的管辖面积而位居山西完备度榜首,随后是省会太原,临近北京的大同完备度也相对较高。晋西北的忻州、朔州、吕梁三市是山西 OSM 要素最为匮乏的区域,其中公共和商业设施的匮乏尤其严重。
Danh Mục Các Đường Dây 500kV Hiện Hữu
1. Đường dây 500kV Bắc-Nam mạch 1
Chiều dài: 1.487 km
3.437 trụ tháp sắt
Từ: trạm biến áp 500kV Hòa Bình
Đến: trạm biến áp 500kV Phú Lâm
Khởi công: 5/4/1992
Đóng điện: 27/5/1994
Công suất truyền tải thiết kế: 600 – 800 MW
Sản lượng điện truyền tải hàng năm: ≈ 2.000 GWh
Tổng mức đầu tư: 5.488,39 tỷ đồng (~ 544 triệu USD)
2. Đường dây 500kV Bắc-Nam mạc
Danh Mục Các Đường Dây 500kV Hiện Hữu
1. Đường dây 500kV Bắc-Nam mạch 1
Chiều dài: 1.487 km
3.437 trụ tháp sắt
Từ: trạm biến áp 500kV Hòa Bình
Đến: trạm biến áp 500kV Phú Lâm
Khởi công: 5/4/1992
Đóng điện: 27/5/1994
Công suất truyền tải thiết kế: 600 – 800 MW
Sản lượng điện truyền tải hàng năm: ≈ 2.000 GWh
Tổng mức đầu tư: 5.488,39 tỷ đồng (~ 544 triệu USD)
2. Đường dây 500kV Bắc-Nam mạch 2
Chiều dài 1.596,3 km
4 dự án độc lập: Pleiku - Phú Lâm, Pleiku - Dốc Sỏi - Đà Nẵng, Đà Nẵng - Hà Tĩnh và Hà Tĩnh - Nho Quan - Thường Tín.
Khởi công: Đầu năm 2002
Đóng điện: 19/4/2004, 30/8/2004, 23/5/2004 và 23/9/2005
Công suất truyền tải thiết kế: 1.300 – 1.500 MW
Tổng mức đầu tư: 7.510 tỷ đồng (~ 476,7 triệu USD)
The Belgian OSM community is importing buildings from governmental data into OSM for some years now. In December I was supposed to present a analysis about this process regarding the import of buildings data from the PICC, the source of data for the Walloon region.
Unfortunately I got sick and I could not present. Anyway, here are some key numbers about this process not only for Wallonia
The Belgian OSM community is importing buildings from governmental data into OSM for some years now. In December I was supposed to present a analysis about this process regarding the import of buildings data from the PICC, the source of data for the Walloon region.
Unfortunately I got sick and I could not present. Anyway, here are some key numbers about this process not only for Wallonia but for Belgium.
The big picture
In Belgium, there are 3 different sources of government data for buildings, each one for the 3 regions of Belgium: Flanders, Wallonia, Brussels. All these sources are integrated in what we call the “building import tool”: the web application buildings.osm.be. People who want to use this tool are encouraged to learn about the import process and to conflate (merge) with existing buildings. In many places indeed, there are already buildings in OSM and integration of every single imported building with existing ones is the preferred way, rather than “delete and replace”. We also ask to not blindly trust official data and to always look if current data in OSM does not bring interesting added value in terms of accuracy and/or local knowledge. After all, it is one of the key force of OpenStreetMap.
What are the lessons
Having imported thousands of buildings myself in the past 3 years using this tool, I found some weird situations in the government data: oddities in house numbering, strange shapes of buildings compared to aerial imagery, etc. Honestly, these are very rare situations, but still it might be interesting to report it to the administration. What is more frequent are update of buildings compared to official data: during the import, by comparing with the aerial imagery or local knowledge, one can find some new buildings, or demolished ones, or some changes in the building outline.
A total of 3,564,874 buildings were imported into OSM in Belgium using the building import tool. It is nearly half of the total number of buildings in OSM in Belgium. Also, before the import tool was set up, a lot of buildings were manually drawn (or semi-manually using some JOSM plugin) from the governmental WMS imageries. So actually even more buildings in OSM somehow come from governmental data. On the other hand, using the import tool, contributors actually replaced/added tags into already existing OSM buildings. So it is hard to tell without further analysis the exact part of buildings that comes from official data.
Without looking at the histories of OSM objects, it is rather difficult to count the number of users who have imported buildings using the tool. By looking at the tag “source:geometry:ref”, 175 contributors have imported (or edited after someone else’s import) at least 100 buildings. The top 10 contributors have imported about 67% of the total imported buildings. This is often observed in OSM (and in other crowdsourcing project): a small amount of users makes the most of the contributions.
Here is a map of the imported buildings colored by the top ten contributors.
Nowadays, there are still some streets with missing buildings, roughly drawn building blocks without addresses in some city centres, but the places with missing buildings tend to disappear. Yet, in the future, adding new buildings, tagging demolished ones and updating building geometries across the country will remain necessary.
In regards that the tool wiki.openstreetmap.orgdata.link works best with smaller administerey areas I will break it down on the municipality level(Kommun in Swedish) we have 290 in Sweden.
Goal:
To be served a table which have the following data:
municipality(kommun)
Amount of linked lakes
Total amount of lakes
Precentage
Total
In regards that the tool https://wiki.openstreetmap.orgdata.link works best with smaller administerey areas I will break it down on the municipality level(Kommun in Swedish) we have 290 in Sweden.
Goal:
To be served a table which have the following data:
municipality(kommun)
Amount of linked lakes
Total amount of lakes
Precentage
Total amount of municipality(kommun)
Total amount of linked lakes
Total amount of lakes
Total Precentage
Main category of all lakes in Sweden on sv.wikipedia.org:
I will then query each municipality(kommun) using Sophox in the SPARQL language on each municipality(kommun) (by name). I will then get a list of QID of all the wikidata lakes that I then can use to ask Sophox if any element has that wikidata QID. If anyone has that
Acknowledged drawbacks/limitations of this strategy:
This database query will not detect cases which multiple elements in OSM has the same QID. The tool https://wiki.openstreetmap.orgdata.link will make you aware of this but not i a table which can give you an overview. For that it is best to update the code at that project, see issue #680 I created in it´s repostory.
Where does the data off the lakes come from in wikidata?
They are inported some time the last 10 years from the national database of lakes and bodies of water called VISS Bots created the articles on Swedish wikipedia from this database and this is the reason we now can link the data from OSM to the wikipedia articles through the wikidata QID on the https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:water=lake polygons(enclosed ways/areas and multipolygons).
Why didn´t I just use the Overpass Turbo API?
You may ask why I just didn´t query the Overpass API to get how many water=lake polygons also had a wikidata tag vs no wikidata tag? There could have been new very small lakes which where mapped in OSM which is not present in VISS(not a lake in the eyes of VISS/the government) and in extension wikipedia/wikidata. This projects goal is to show as many maplinked great polygons from OSM in the infoboxes on the lakes, to be able to motivate people to use https://wiki.openstreetmap.orgdata.link and track progress in doing so!
Presentation:
I will publish the Sophox query here in the diary and also try to pitch the creator for https://wiki.openstreetmap.orgdata.link to implement it the search tab for . Type: administrative. I will also publish the it as a Soppbox example.
Hi! I’m @likeToTravel, and I suck at writing, so I’m gonna go straight to the point:
THE LIST
Pascal Neis Stuff:
OSMviz. I use this to visualize my changes because I am so dumb, I don’t understand OSMCha (hence, you won’t find OSMCha on my list). To see a changeset, go to the link and add the changeset number after ?c= in the link. Or, ju
Merry Christmas!
Part 1
Hi! I’m @likeToTravel, and I suck at writing, so I’m gonna go straight to the point:
THE LIST
Pascal Neis Stuff:
OSMviz. I use this to visualize my changes because I am so dumb, I don’t understand OSMCha (hence, you won’t find OSMCha on my list). To see a changeset, go to the link and add the changeset number after ?c= in the link. Or, just go to…
OSM Lane Visualizer. This helps me a lot with understanding any tag that starts with turn, especially https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:turn:lanes& https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:turn:lanes:*.
Go Map!!. OSM Editor for iOS and iPadOS! I don’t use Android, so this is my best option. The UI is weird, and you really need to know your tags if you want to map here, but apart from that, it can also do GPS Traces, which works insanely well with Shortcuts (it is an app).