Exactly one year ago I published my first visualization of the global OpenStreetMap data density. This is the updated 2014 edition.
(click image for slippy map or here for high-res images)
Each pixel shows the number of nodes in its corresponding area¹. But this year every point that has data in it is shown (i.e. there is at least one node at that location - last year only locations with more than 1000 nodes were included). Also, the slippy map has two more zoom levels which reveal even more impressive details like on this crop of the central Alps:
Here is a low-zoom image of the whole planet:
¹ Yes, this is Mercator map tile area, not actual on-the-ground area. Keep this in mind when comparing regions at different latitudes!
² Copying: visualizations © Martin Raifer, CC-BY - source data © OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL
PS: The visualizations are based on a planet file I downloaded one or two weeks ago. It was processed using some custom scripts based on node-osmium, the graphics were made with gnuplot (just like last years’) and finally the map tiles for the slippy map were cut using imagemagick. I could probably explain the individual steps in a separate blog post, if anyone was interested - let me know!
Parola
Comentario de imagico no 27 de Xuño de 2014 ás 11:15
Very nice. Maybe you could publish the color scales for the different zoom levels, i.e. what color represents how many nodes per web mercator square kilometers.
Converting the data to real densities should be relatively easy by multiplying with the area scaling function of the projection. This would lighten up the polar regions quite a bit, Greenland for example is is fact mapped with similar node density in the north and south.
Comentario de Endres Pelka no 27 de Xuño de 2014 ás 14:14
Yes, please publish the individual steps. I’d like to render a similar map, but only for some smaller regions and with higher zoom levels :)
Comentario de HannesHH no 28 de Xuño de 2014 ás 10:27
That’s gorgeous! I want that Europe image framed on my wall. :)
Comentario de marscot no 28 de Xuño de 2014 ás 11:12
that is a great picture
Comentario de grin no 28 de Xuño de 2014 ás 16:45
Beautiful, thank you very much!
Comentario de AnnaPS no 28 de Xuño de 2014 ás 18:04
This is gorgeous. I’d love to see a blogpost with the individual steps!
Comentario de Noro Hibu no 12 de Agosto de 2014 ás 07:15
I am interested. Please tell in detail how you did it)
Comentario de stev no 15 de Febreiro de 2015 ás 17:57
Hi,
I’m writing a thesis on whether Hadoop / other “big data” tools might be useful to analyse OSM data (https://lists.openstreetmap.org/pipermail/dev/2015-January/028227.html) so this is the sort of operation that it would be great to compare. If you have any further details about how you did it I would be much obliged.
Thanks
Stephen
Comentario de Enock4seth no 29 de Abril de 2015 ás 20:05
Awesome! I like it.
Comentario de goclem no 9 de Febreiro de 2017 ás 09:39
Thanks a lot for this map! I was wondering what was the maximum number of nodes in one pixel of your map. I understand that the minimum is 1000. Best, Clément
Comentario de tyr_asd no 9 de Febreiro de 2017 ás 10:01
@goclem: In this visualization (as well as the updated one) from 2016, there is no minimum number of nodes in a pixel. The maximum depends very much on the zoom level you’re looking at. Frederic’s analysis from 2013 may give you some more insight into what absolute numbers one might have to expect.