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how to move the street name to the side of the street.

with this file coloured+name_offset.mapcss https://projeto.softwarelivre.tec.br/s/4z2jzQSjkL5oPTW you can move the street name to the side of the street, making the street name visible for better mapping of street names.

In this video I teach you how to use this file that you have to download to your computer.

https://projeto.softwarelivre.tec.br/s/4z2jzQSjkL5oPTW

link no Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jOnFjtuI10&t=57s

latest contributions

I have been mapping street names in Brazilian cities that need street name mapping.

The mapping is diverse between the North and Northeast regions, but I can map in any of the five regions of Brazil.

List of the latest mapped cities.

Imperatriz, MA osm.org/relation/332989

See full entry

Location: Nossa Senhora da Luz, São Lourenço da Mata, Região Geográfica Imediata do Recife, Região Metropolitana do Recife, Região Geográfica Intermediária do Recife, Pernambuco, Northeast Region, Brazil

How to map objects in Openstreetmap with Rapid Editor.

UmbraOSM (Brazilian OpenStreetMap Mappers Union) brings you another video tutorial, teaching you how to use the Rapid editor to map buildings and roads in OpenStreetMap. Check it out and improve your mapping skills!

Rapid Editor https://rapideditor.org/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOIQnPCuAug&t=902s video link on youtube

UmbraOSM (Brazilian OpenStreetMap Mappers Union)

Posted by kumakyoo on 28 March 2025 in English. Last updated on 25 April 2025.

This blog post is part of a series of blog posts about the new OSM file format “OMA”. This is the fourth post. At the end of the article you’ll find links to the other blog entries.

 

The real subject of this blog series is the newly developed file format. So far I have mainly talked about the tools for creating and using the format, because the format itself is a dry subject. But now it’s time to dive more deeply into the format itself. I will not go into all the details, because I think that apart from some freaks like me, people are not interested in all the details. If you are, take a look at the specs.

 

Fast Access

OpenStreetMap data consists of a set of elements. Some of these elements are nodes, some are ways, and some are relations. You can think of OSM as a big storehouse where all the elements are scattered around:

A set of elements

Obviously it’s hard to find what you’re looking for, if there is no order.

The Order of OSM Files

See full entry

Posted by Allison P on 27 March 2025 in English. Last updated on 3 May 2025.

What is anti-SEO aktion?

Maybe you’ve seen one of my changeset comments reading “anti-SEO aktion”. Maybe I even reverted your changes in a changeset with that comment. You might be wondering, what does it mean?

Well, I hope “anti-SEO” is clear enough. OpenStreetMap is not a platform for boosting your online presence. Your OpenStreetMap listing, in all likelihood, does very little to improve your rankings. If the marketing agency you hired is improving their listing here, you ought to find one that used more evidence-based SEO practices.

And what of “aktion”? It’s a play on Antifaschistische Aktion, which was an anti-Nazi resistance effort in Weimar Germany. It’s not a political statement, per se. It’s just a bit of fun with changeset comments.

How do I get involved?

Any experienced mapper probably knows what belongs in OpenStreetMap and what doesn’t. For those who don’t, here are the general steps involved in fixing spam within the U.S. While following all of them isn’t necessary, it’s the best way to turn SEO efforts into a real business listing that improves the map.

See full entry

Posted by Jan Prazak on 27 March 2025 in English. Last updated on 7 April 2025.

Objects in private gardens which are of no public interest such as movable objects (like small swimming pools), should NOT be entered into any public maps! They add nothing to the quality and usefulness of a map, I consider it a map data spam.

I may sometimes remove such objects from the Frýdlant region, especially if not mapped correctly (make sure private swimming pools are marked as private to not interfere with searching for nearby swimming pools).

Location: Frýdlant, okres Liberec, Liberec Region, Northeast, 464 01, Czechia
Posted by Raquel Dezidério Souto on 27 March 2025 in English. Last updated on 1 April 2025.

Ler em Português

MapComplete, Panoramax, overpass turbo and uMap: what can you do with these programs when mapping trees?


But first, a suitable question: how important is it to map trees?

In addition to the urban issue, in which it is often assessed whether natural elements and urban equipment are preserved, whether they are adequate or well distributed in a given area, the greatest motivation for mapping trees is to monitor vegetation cover, since these individuals are ecologically relevant. Combined with an educational activity, it also helps to raise awareness of their importance among students.

Trees provide various ecosystem services (or environmental services), such as providing shelter and food for different species, cooling the ambient air, removing atmospheric CO2, producing biomass, preventing soil erosion, reducing noise pollution et al.


Mapping with MapComplete

mapcomplete_image

See full entry

Location: Recreio dos Bandeirantes, Rio de Janeiro, Região Geográfica Imediata do Rio de Janeiro, Região Metropolitana do Rio de Janeiro, Região Geográfica Intermediária do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Southeast Region, Brazil

After spending a bit of time mapping and getting a feel for the scope, type of work this project will require, it’s clear that this project will unsurprisingly take quite a bit of time.

To make this process as engaging as possible, I think it would be wise to alter my workflow slightly. Initially, I planned to start with only mapping buildings for the entire island. However this would mean hours and hours of monotony, so I think a good workaround here is to keep my current workflow structure, but just apply it to a smaller scale. For example, I’ll pick smaller sections of the island to do both the building and the terrain mapping. This will give the work more variety and also make it more clear which areas I’ve already worked on.

Location: Unincorporated Newfoundland, Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

Project Outline

This entry is a statement of my intention to map out Bell Island, Newfoundland. I will start south and move my way north as the south is less densely detailed and work will likely be quicker. My intended workflow is stated below, where I will not move on to the next item on the list until the first item has been mapped as thoroughly as possible on the entire island. While I am experienced at working with geospatial data, this is my first project on OSM so any suggestions/comments on my work are appreciated.

I will provide updates through future diary entries as my work progresses. This is a casual project so I am not setting any timelines.

Workflow

  1. Buildings & associated roads
  2. Terrain
  3. (Might drop due to lack of local knowledge) Secondary urban & rural characteristics (cemeteries, parking lots, etc.)
Location: Unincorporated Newfoundland, Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Posted by DENelson83 on 25 March 2025 in English.

You may have noticed that I have marked a lot of buildings in Nanaimo with notes indicating that each of those buildings has multiple businesses in it. This is because on the next sunny weekend, I will be going down to Nanaimo to survey all of those businesses, and I need to be able to see at a glance which specific buildings I need to survey. I will need to know the exact position of each business within each building, so what I end up putting into OSM as a result of this survey is an as-accurate-as-possible depiction of each building’s “floor plan”, if you will.

Location: Northfield, Nanaimo, Regional District of Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Posted by TonyJC on 24 March 2025 in English.

One of the reasons as to why I loved this image set was because it was almost centered completely from the top-down, which made tracing buildings far easier. This new set that was introduced makes it extremely hard now, and all of the already-traced assets like buildings and roads are now quite skewed when based off the new set. It’s frustrating.

Location: Calidonia, Panama City, Calidonia, Distrito de Panamá, Panamá Province, 0843, Panama

Despite the apparent lack of public transit, Redmond Watershed Preserve is accessible with a bit of walking.

Redmond Watershed Preserve is a city park in Redmond, WA, abutting the Redmond Ridge development to the east, and the Puget Power Trail (aka PSE Trail) to the south. It is just outside of the walkshed that trip planning services use but is still reasonably easy and safe to get to using the Power Trail and some on-street walking, due to the Power Trail not actually being contiguous.

  1. Catch the Metro 250 bus to Avondale from Bellevue TC, South Kirkland P&R, Kirkland TC, or Redmond TC. If you are traveling on a weekday make sure you are on a bus to Avondale and not Bear Creek P&R; Metro provides 15-minute service but at the expense of dropping the Avondale tail from half of the trips.
  2. Get off at Avondale & Puget Power Trail and walk east.
  3. Take either the Power Trail or Perimeter Loop trail (if you detour to the park) to 196th Ave NE.
  4. Walk N to NE 116th St
  5. Walk E in the shoulder to 206th Ave NE.
  6. Walk S to NE 112th Street, and then walk W to the continuation of the Power Trail.
  7. Keep walking until you run into the Pipeline Connector Trail or Pipeline Regional Trail, both of which will take you through the Watershed Preserve.
  8. When returning, simply follow the directions in reverse.

During the week, Metro’s 224 DART service runs along Novelty Hill Road and makes various stops in Redmond Ridge, but its lack of frequency makes trip planning tricky unless you’re willing to wait in a suburban waste for an hour or more.

https://github.com/skylarthompson/transithikes/blob/main/puget_sound/redmond_watershed_preserve.md

Location: Redmond, King County, Washington, 98052, United States

Lots of people use editors such as iD, Potlatch, Vespucci, GoMap!! etc. for editing. There are entirely sensible reasons for this - I’ll always try and edit relations in Potlatch or iD since for me editing relations there is a much saner experience than in Josm. However, one thing that they miss is Josm’s Validator, which can check for relation errors that other editors can’t. Here’s how to use that to detect problems, and then fix them elsewhere.

I’ve created some test data on the dev server for this, so that I can deliberately create and fix errors. If you want to test with that data on the “dev” server, you’ll need to create an account there and tell Josm to login to that server - or you can just look at the screenshots below.

First, you’ll need to download Josm (I just downloaded the latest .jar file) . Josm’s user interface will be familiar to anyone who used CAD software in the 1980s, but may be less so to others.

Then you’ll need to download some data in the area that you were editing (file / download data / download). So that you can see what is where, it helps to have a background layer - “OpenStreetMap Carto (standard)” will work, or you can use an imagery layer if you prefer. Zoom in to your area of interest, select with the mouse and “download”.

Then click “validate” (on the row at the very bottom right of the screen).

See full entry

Location: Shandonagh, Greenpark ED, The Municipal District of Athlone — Moate, County Westmeath, Leinster, Ireland
Posted by kumakyoo on 21 March 2025 in English. Last updated on 25 April 2025.

This blog post is part of a series of blog posts about the new OSM file format “OMA”. This is the third post. At the end of the article you’ll find links to the other blog entries.

 

Until now you’ve got a general idea of what the Oma file format is, and an idea of how to use it. But you do not know, where to get an Oma file from.

Well, I hope, that sooner or later someone like Geofabrik will provide a daily updated planet.oma and some excerpts. That would make sense, because converting the data takes a lot of resources, and it would be a waste if everyone had to do it themselves.

But until we have such a distributor, you have to convert OSM files to Oma files on yourself. I have written a converter for this purpose. It’s written in Java and should be easy to use.

 

The Converter

You need a copy of oma.jar. If your are using Linux (or any other Unix operating system) you just have to type the following command:1

java -Xmx<some number>G -jar oma.jar <some osm file>

The -Xmx part tells the Java Virtual Machine to use <some number> gigabytes of memory. For example, my computer has got 4GB of main memory, so I’ll use -Xmx3G, reducing the available memory by 1GB, because the operating system needs some memory too.

The osm file mentioned in the command, can be one of .osm, .o5m or .pbf2.

Well, that’s about it. The program will read the file and start the conversion. This can take a long time, and hopefully it won’t crash.

Huh, crash? I wish I could give you better news, but unfortunately I have not been able to write a program that does never crash. The reason for this is that Java gives no guarantees or means of dealing with out-of-memory situations.3 So: If you have enough memory (and disk space), a crash should never happen, but if you have only limited memory, a crash might be possible.4

See full entry

– Ler em Português

An interview with a university in Italy gives details of the collaborative mapping carried out in response to the Rio Grande do Sul disaster


This interview is registered on Zenodo.org and available as PDF file. How to cite this interview:

Accessing information in moments of crisis - Interview with Dr. Raquel Dezidério Souto about the Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)’s disaster occurred in April and May, 2024. Respondent: Raquel Dezidério Souto. Interviewer: Laura Bortoloni. Rio de Janeiro: IVIDES.org, 20 mar. 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15058928. Licensed under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 Ⓒ authors.

This interview is also available in Portuguese:* https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15058822


1. Professional Profile

Can you tell us about your background and how you became involved in Cartography?

My first contact with cartography was during my undergraduate studies in Oceanography. Then I got my Master Science in Population Studies and Social Research (IBGE) and my PhD in Geography (UFRJ). Over time, I developed lines of research in collaborative mapping, with the support of digital cartography and Web mapping. The focus of my post-doctorate in geography has been the development of Web solutions for digital collaborative mapping. We are currently developing projects with free software or hybrid projects (mixing free and proprietary software), within the framework of the Virtual Institute for Sustainable Development - IVIDES.orgⓇ, a virtual research institute that I created in 2008. Some of these projects are being made possible by IVIDES DATA, its management company.

What drew you to humanitarian mapping and participatory mapping projects?

See full entry

Location: Farroupilha, Porto Alegre, Região Geográfica Imediata de Porto Alegre, Metropolitan Region of Porto Alegre, Região Geográfica Intermediária de Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, South Region, Brazil