http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
http://www.openstreetmap.org/images/osm_logo.png" alt=""/> OpenStreetMap (openstreetmap.org) is a global collaborative mapping project, which offers maps and map data released with an open license, encouraging free re-use and re-distribution. The data is created by a large community of volunteers who use a variety of simple on-the-ground surveying techniques, and wiki-syle editing tools to collaborate as they create the maps, in a process which is open to everyone. The project originated in London, and an active community of mappers and developers are based here. Mapping work in London is ongoing (and you can help!) but the coverage is already good enough for many uses.
Browse the map of London on OpenStreetMap.org
The whole of England updated daily:
For more details of downloads available from OpenStreetMap, including downloading the whole planet, see 'planet.osm' on the wiki.
Download small areas of the map by bounding-box. For example this URL requests the data around Trafalgar Square:
http://api.openstreetmap.org/api/0.6/map?bbox=-0.13062,51.5065,-0.12557,51.50969
Data filtered by "tag". For example this URL returns all elements in London tagged shop=supermarket:
http://www.informationfreeway.org/api/0.6/*[shop=supermarket][bbox=-0.48,51.30,0.21,51.70]
The format of the data is a raw XML represention of all the elements making up the map. OpenStreetMap is composed of interconnected "nodes" and "ways" (and sometimes "relations") each with a set of name=value pairs called "tags". These classify and describe properties of the elements, and ultimately influence how they get drawn on the map. To understand more about tags, and different ways of working with this data format refer to the following pages on the OpenStreetMap wiki.
Rather than working with raw map data, you may prefer to embed maps from OpenStreetMap on your website with a simple bit of javascript. You can also present overlays of other data, in a manner very similar to working with google maps. In fact you can even use the google maps API to do this. See OSM on your own website for details and links to various javascript map libraries.
The OpenStreetMap project aims to attract large numbers of contributors who all chip in a little bit to help build the map. Although the map editing tools take a little while to learn, they are designed to be as simple as possible, so that everyone can get involved. This project offers an exciting means of allowing local London communities to take ownership of their part of the map.
Read about how to Get Involved and see the London page for details of OpenStreetMap community events.
This web map references the live tiled map service from the OpenStreetMap project. OpenStreetMap (OSM) is an open collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Volunteers gather location data using GPS, local knowledge, and other free sources of information such as free satellite imagery, and upload it. The resulting free map can be viewed and downloaded from the OpenStreetMap server: http://www.OpenStreetMap.org. See that website for additional information about OpenStreetMap. It is made available as a basemap for GIS work in Esri products under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.Tip: This service is one of the basemaps used in the ArcGIS.com map viewer and ArcGIS Explorer Online. Simply click one of those links to launch the interactive application of your choice, and then choose Open Street Map from the Basemap control to start using this service. You'll also find this service in the Basemap gallery in ArcGIS Explorer Desktop and ArcGIS Desktop 10.
Important Note: This item is in mature support as of December 2024. See blog for more information.This 3D scene layer presents OpenStreetMap (OSM) trees data hosted by Esri. Esri created buildings and trees scene layers from the OSM Daylight map distribution, which is supported by Facebook and others. The Daylight map distribution has been sunsetted and data updates supporting this layer are no longer available. You can visit openstreetmap.maps.arcgis.com to explore a collection of maps, scenes, and layers featuring OpenStreetMap data in ArcGIS. You can review the 3D Scene Layers Documentation to learn more about how the building and tree features in OSM are modeled and rendered in the 3D scene layers, and see tagging recommendations to get the best results.OpenStreetMap is an open collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Volunteers gather location data using GPS, local knowledge, and other free sources of information and upload it. The resulting free map can be viewed and downloaded from the OpenStreetMap site: www.OpenStreetMap.org. Esri is a supporter of the OSM project.Note: This layer is supported in Scene Viewer and ArcGIS Pro 3.0 or higher.
This dataset contains the latest Open Street Map (OSM) objects for Greece, including the following elements: 1) Buildings, 2) Land Use Information, 3) Natural Objects, 4) Places, 5) Places of Faith and Worship, 6) Points of Interest, 7) Railway Networks, 8) Road Networks, 9) Points of Traffic Interest, 10) Mixed Transportation Hubs, 11) Water Bodies, and 12) Waterways.
Information and data were collected from: www.geofabrik.de
Το εν λόγω σύνολο δεδομένων περιλαμβάνει τα νεότερα Open Street Map (OSM) αντικείμενα για την Ελλάδα. Περιλαμβάνει τα ακόλουθα αντικείμενα: 1) Κτίρια, 2) Χρήσεις Γης, 3) Φυσικά Αντικείμενα, 4) Τοποθεσίες, 5) Χώροι Λατρείας, 6) Σημεία Ενδιαφέροντος, 7) Σιδηροδρομικά Δίκτυα, 8) Οδικά Δίκτυα, 9) Σημεία Συγκοινωνιακού Ενδιαφέροντος, 10) Συγκοινωνιακοί Κόμβοι, 11) Υδάτινοι Φορείς και 12) Υδάτινοι Δίαυλοι.
Οι επιμέρους πληροφορίες και δεδομένα συλλέχθηκαν από το: www.geofabrik.de
Important Note: This item is in mature support as of December 2024. See blog for more information.This web map presents a vector basemap of OpenStreetMap (OSM) data hosted by Esri. This version of the map is rendered in a style similar to the Esri Street Map (with Relief). It includes the World Hillshade layer. Created from the sunsetted Daylight map distribution, data updates supporting this layer are no longer available.OpenStreetMap is an open collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Volunteers gather location data using GPS, local knowledge, and other free sources of information and upload it. The resulting free map can be viewed and downloaded from the OpenStreetMap site: www.OpenStreetMap.org. Esri is a supporter of the OSM project. Precise Tile Registration: The web map uses the improved tiling scheme “WGS84 Geographic, Version 2” to ensure proper tile positioning at higher resolutions (neighborhood level and beyond). The new tiling scheme is much more precise than tiling schemes of the legacy basemaps Esri released years ago. We recommend that you start using this new basemap for any new web maps in WGS84 that you plan to author. Due to the number of differences between the old and new tiling schemes, some web clients will not be able to overlay tile layers in the old and new tiling schemes in one web map.
http://dcat-ap.de/def/licenses/odblhttp://dcat-ap.de/def/licenses/odbl
OpenStreetMap is a project launched in 2004 to create a free world map. We collect data on roads, railways, rivers, forests, homes and anything else around the world, commonly seen on maps. Because we collect the data yourself and not distinguish from existing cards, we have all the rights to it. Open StreetMap data may be used free of charge by anyone and further processed at any time. This dataset contains the Berlin section of the Planet File. Other formats such as OSM-XML, shapefiles, SVG, Adobe Illustrator, Garmin GPS, GPX, GML, KML, Manifold GIS, grid graphics can be exported at http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Export.
Open StreetMap-data questions can be discussed here: Http://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewforum.php?id=14
Public Domain Mark 1.0https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
OpenStreetMap (OSM) is a free, editable map & spatial database of the whole world. This dataset is an extract of OpenStreetMap data for French Polynesia in a GIS-friendly format.
The OSM data has been split into separate layers based on themes (buildings, roads, points of interest, etc), and it comes bundled with a QGIS project and styles, to help you get started with using the data in your maps. This OSM product will be updated weekly.
The goal is to increase awareness among Pacific GIS users of the richness of OpenStreetMap data in Pacific countries, as well as the gaps, so that they can take advantage of this free resource, become interested in contributing to OSM, and perhaps join the global OSM community.
OpenStreetMap data is open data, with a very permissive licence. You can download it and use it for any purpose you like, as long as you credit OpenStreetMap and its contributors. You don't have to pay anyone, or ask anyone's permission. When you download and use the data, you're granted permission to do that under the Open Database Licence (ODbL). The only conditions are that you Attribute, Share-Alike, and Keep open.
The required credit is “© OpenStreetMap contributors”. If you make a map, you should display this credit somewhere. If you provide the data to someone else, you should make sure the license accompanies the data
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
The High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) product is derived from airborne LiDAR data (mainly in the south) and satellite images in the north. The complete coverage of the Canadian territory is gradually being established. It includes a Digital Terrain Model (DTM), a Digital Surface Model (DSM) and other derived data. For DTM datasets, derived data available are slope, aspect, shaded relief, color relief and color shaded relief maps and for DSM datasets, derived data available are shaded relief, color relief and color shaded relief maps. The productive forest line is used to separate the northern and the southern parts of the country. This line is approximate and may change based on requirements. In the southern part of the country (south of the productive forest line), DTM and DSM datasets are generated from airborne LiDAR data. They are offered at a 1 m or 2 m resolution and projected to the UTM NAD83 (CSRS) coordinate system and the corresponding zones. The datasets at a 1 m resolution cover an area of 10 km x 10 km while datasets at a 2 m resolution cover an area of 20 km by 20 km. In the northern part of the country (north of the productive forest line), due to the low density of vegetation and infrastructure, only DSM datasets are generally generated. Most of these datasets have optical digital images as their source data. They are generated at a 2 m resolution using the Polar Stereographic North coordinate system referenced to WGS84 horizontal datum or UTM NAD83 (CSRS) coordinate system. Each dataset covers an area of 50 km by 50 km. For some locations in the north, DSM and DTM datasets can also be generated from airborne LiDAR data. In this case, these products will be generated with the same specifications as those generated from airborne LiDAR in the southern part of the country. The HRDEM product is referenced to the Canadian Geodetic Vertical Datum of 2013 (CGVD2013), which is now the reference standard for heights across Canada. Source data for HRDEM datasets is acquired through multiple projects with different partners. Since data is being acquired by project, there is no integration or edgematching done between projects. The tiles are aligned within each project. The product High Resolution Digital Elevation Model (HRDEM) is part of the CanElevation Series created in support to the National Elevation Data Strategy implemented by NRCan. Collaboration is a key factor to the success of the National Elevation Data Strategy. Refer to the “Supporting Document” section to access the list of the different partners including links to their respective data.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
An Irish Language cultural map at 1:250,000 scale for Northern Ireland and surrounding areas with both Irish and English forms of place names. Please note this is not georeferenced. By download or use of this map you agree to abide by the Open Government Data Licence.Please Note for Open Data NI Users: Esri Rest API is not Broken, it will not open on its own in a Web Browser but can be copied and used in Desktop and Webmaps
Ordnance Survey ® OpenMap - Local Buildings are polygon features that represent a built entity that includes a roof. This is a generalized building and could be made up of an amalgamation of other buildings and structures.Ordnance Survey ® OpenMap - Local Important Buildings are polygon features that represent buildings that fall within the extent of a functional site across England, Wales and Scotland. Important Buildings are classified into a number of building themes such as:Attraction and Leisure - A feature that provides non-sporting leisure activities for the public. Includes Tourist Attractions.Air Transport - This theme includes all sites associated with movement of passengers and goods by air, or where aircraft take off and land. Includes Airport, Helicopter Station, Heliport.Cultural Facility - A feature that is deemed to be of particular interest to society. Includes Museum, Library, Art Gallery.Education facility - This theme includes a very broad group of sites with a common high level primary function of providing education (either state funded or by fees). Includes: Primary Education, Secondary Education, Higher or University Education, Further Education, Non State Secondary Education, Non State Primary Education, Special Needs Education.Emergency Services - Emergency services are organizations which ensure public safety and health by addressing different emergencies. Includes: Fire Station, Police Station.Medical Facility - This theme includes sites which focus on the provision of secondary medical care services. Includes: Medical Care Accommodation, Hospital, Hospice.Religious Building - A place where members of a religious group congregate for worship. Includes: Places of Worship (churches etc.)Retail - A feature that sells to the general public finished goods. Includes: Post OfficeRoad Transport - This theme includes: Bus Stations, Coach Stations, Road user services.Sports and Leisure Facility - A feature where many different sports can be played. Includes: Sports and Leisure CentreWater Transport - This theme includes sites involved in the transfer of passengers and or goods onto vessels for transport across water. Includes: Port consisting of Docks and Nautical Berthing, Vehicular Ferry Terminal, Passenger Ferry Terminal.With OS OpenMap - Local Buildings and Important Buildings you can:Understand your area in detail, including the location of key sites such as schools and hospitals.Share high-quality maps of development proposals to help interested parties to understand their extent and impact.Analyse data in relation to important public buildings, roads, railways, lines and more.Use in conjunction with other layers such as Functional Sites – an area or extent which represents a certain type of function or activity.Present accurate information consistently with other available open data products.The currency of the data is 04/2025
This map shows the free and open data status of county public geospatial (GIS) data across Minnesota. The accompanying data set can be used to make similar maps using GIS software.
Counties shown in this dataset as having free and open public geospatial data (with or without a policy) are: Aitkin, Anoka, Becker, Beltrami, Benton, Big Stone, Carlton, Carver, Cass, Chippewa, Chisago, Clay, Clearwater, Cook, Crow Wing, Dakota, Douglas, Grant, Hennepin, Hubbard, Isanti, Itasca, Kittson, Koochiching, Lac qui Parle, Lake, Lyon, Marshall, McLeod, Meeker, Mille Lacs, Morrison, Mower, Norman, Olmsted, Otter Tail, Pipestone, Polk, Pope, Ramsey, Renville, Rice, Scott, Sherburne, Stearns, Steele, Stevens, St. Louis, Traverse, Waseca, Washington, Wilkin, Winona, Wright and Yellow Medicine.
To see if a county's data is distributed via the Minnesota Geospatial Commons, check the Commons organizations page: https://gisdata.mn.gov/organization
To see if a county distributes data via its website, check the link(s) on the Minnesota County GIS Contacts webpage: https://www.mngeo.state.mn.us/county_contacts.html
Prototype maps for the representation of the geomorphological elements on a single information level, created on an experimental basis on behalf of the Region, by the Department of Earth Sciences of the University of Pisa which defined the first guidelines for the survey of the geomorphological elements of the Ligurian territory. The manual and the originals are available at the Regional Planning Sector - Coverage: Corresponding to sheet no. 213050 - Origin: Geological survey scale 1:10000
Important Note: This item is in mature support as of December 2024. See blog for more information.This web map presents a vector basemap of OpenStreetMap (OSM) data hosted by Esri. It provides a reference layer featuring map labels, boundary lines, and roads and includes imagery. Created from the sunsetted Daylight map distribution, data updates supporting this layer are no longer available.OpenStreetMap is an open collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Volunteers gather location data using GPS, local knowledge, and other free sources of information and upload it. The resulting free map can be viewed and downloaded from the OpenStreetMap site: www.OpenStreetMap.org. Esri is a supporter of the OSM project.
Lidar point cloud data with classifications – unclassified (1), ground (2), low vegetation (3), medium vegetation (4), high vegetation (5), buildings (6), low point - noise (7), reserved – model keypoint (8), high noise (18).
Update of the information level starting from the Forest Charter created in 2002 by the C.A.A.R. of Sarzana - Coverage: Entire Regional Territory - Origin: Data collected with ground surveys and visual identification of the different typological qualities of the forest populations, with the aid of technical maps and photo-interpretation of the orthophotos
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer features special areas of interest (AOIs) that have been contributed to Esri Community Maps using the new Community Maps Editor app. The data that is accepted by Esri will be included in selected Esri basemaps, including our suite of Esri Vector Basemaps, and made available through this layer to export and use offline. Export DataThe contributed data is also available for contributors and other users to export (or extract) and re-use for their own purposes. Users can export the full layer from the ArcGIS Online item details page by clicking the Export Data button and selecting one of the supported formats (e.g. shapefile, or file geodatabase (FGDB)). User can extract selected layers for an area of interest by opening in Map Viewer, clicking the Analysis button, viewing the Manage Data tools, and using the Extract Data tool. To display this data with proper symbology and metadata in ArcGIS Pro, you can download and use this layer file.Data UsageThe data contributed through the Community Maps Editor app is primarily intended for use in the Esri Basemaps. Esri staff will periodically (e.g. weekly) review the contents of the contributed data and either accept or reject the data for use in the basemaps. Accepted features will be added to the Esri basemaps in a subsequent update and will remain in the app for the contributor or others to edit over time. Rejected features will be removed from the app.Esri Community Maps Contributors and other ArcGIS Online users can download accepted features from this layer for their internal use or map publishing, subject to the terms of use below.
Here you will find an assembly of the open street map in metropolitan france. The geopackage version also contains data from neighbouring countries (border regions except espagne). The the.qgz project allows the geopackage data to be opened with the busy style and hacking depending on the zoom level. video presenting this data gpkg and QGIS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6O9cMqVVvM&t=6s The version.sql is characterised by an additional attribute for each geometric entity: The INSEE code This data will be updated on a monthly basis.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR DECLARING GPKG DATA: Download all files and rename as follows:
OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_001.zip — > OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.001 OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_002.zip — > OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.002 OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_003.zip — > OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.003 OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_004.zip — > OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.004
or if you know the batch back to create a.bat file containing this (or you rename the renowned file. txt as rename.bat):
pushd “% ~ DP0” REN OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_001.zip OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.001 REN OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_002.zip OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.002 REN OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_003.zip OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.003 REN OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_004.zip OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214.zip.004
and launch.bat by double clicking on it (the batch must be in the same place as the zip files)
Then right-click on the OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_001.zip file and have it extracted to “OSM_QGZ_GPKG_ET_FRONTALIER_PRDG_FXX_ED214_001\” with your pressure relief software. There is no need to click on 002, 003, 004. Opening file.001 opens all other parts of the archive
For version.sql, the procedure is the same: rename OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214_001.zip to OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214.zip.001 OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214_002.zip to OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214.zip.002 OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214_003.zip to OSM_SQL_FXX_PRDG_D000_ED214.zip.003 Then carry out pressure relief
Prototype maps for the representation of the geomorphological elements on a single information level, created on an experimental basis on behalf of the Region, by the Department of Earth Sciences of the University of Pisa which defined the first guidelines for the survey of the geomorphological elements of the Ligurian territory. The manual and the originals are available at the Regional Planning Sector - Coverage: Corresponding to sheet no. 232150 - Origin: Geological survey scale 1:10000
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This spatial polygon dataset displays the footprint location for each map product created by this department. This index provides access to download map products as a PDF. The index is regularly updated. Each record in the index dataset contains details for the map including; - link to download the map as a PDF - map name, map description, coverage location area and date created - link to the project metadata record All map products can be viewed and downloaded as a PDF via NR Maps. https://nrmaps.nt.gov.au/nrmaps.html See Layers: Map Products \ All Map Products. - Tick the layer to display the map footprint area in the map screen. - Right mouse click to make the layer active. - Select a feature on the map screen in your area of interest or; - Use the search panel to enter details and filter the records. - Review map details in the data panel (below the map screen) to download a map product (PDF).
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
http://www.openstreetmap.org/images/osm_logo.png" alt=""/> OpenStreetMap (openstreetmap.org) is a global collaborative mapping project, which offers maps and map data released with an open license, encouraging free re-use and re-distribution. The data is created by a large community of volunteers who use a variety of simple on-the-ground surveying techniques, and wiki-syle editing tools to collaborate as they create the maps, in a process which is open to everyone. The project originated in London, and an active community of mappers and developers are based here. Mapping work in London is ongoing (and you can help!) but the coverage is already good enough for many uses.
Browse the map of London on OpenStreetMap.org
The whole of England updated daily:
For more details of downloads available from OpenStreetMap, including downloading the whole planet, see 'planet.osm' on the wiki.
Download small areas of the map by bounding-box. For example this URL requests the data around Trafalgar Square:
http://api.openstreetmap.org/api/0.6/map?bbox=-0.13062,51.5065,-0.12557,51.50969
Data filtered by "tag". For example this URL returns all elements in London tagged shop=supermarket:
http://www.informationfreeway.org/api/0.6/*[shop=supermarket][bbox=-0.48,51.30,0.21,51.70]
The format of the data is a raw XML represention of all the elements making up the map. OpenStreetMap is composed of interconnected "nodes" and "ways" (and sometimes "relations") each with a set of name=value pairs called "tags". These classify and describe properties of the elements, and ultimately influence how they get drawn on the map. To understand more about tags, and different ways of working with this data format refer to the following pages on the OpenStreetMap wiki.
Rather than working with raw map data, you may prefer to embed maps from OpenStreetMap on your website with a simple bit of javascript. You can also present overlays of other data, in a manner very similar to working with google maps. In fact you can even use the google maps API to do this. See OSM on your own website for details and links to various javascript map libraries.
The OpenStreetMap project aims to attract large numbers of contributors who all chip in a little bit to help build the map. Although the map editing tools take a little while to learn, they are designed to be as simple as possible, so that everyone can get involved. This project offers an exciting means of allowing local London communities to take ownership of their part of the map.
Read about how to Get Involved and see the London page for details of OpenStreetMap community events.