Walk to School Week

By , 21, May, 2013 9:28 am

Guest blog by Jayne Phenton at Living Streets

Although my school days were a long time ago I still vividly remember was the walk to school.  Walking with my mum when I was small – chatting, looking out for things for the nature table on the way – and then, when I was older, with my school mates.  Starting to walk to school on your own was a natural rite of passage.

Fast forward a good number of years and it seems that is no longer the case.  Less than half of primary school children walk to school and even fewer older children. This week is Walk to School Week and today (20 May 2013), Living Streets has published Must Try Harder, a half-term school report on the current generation’s journey to school.

The statistics from a YouGov poll commissioned by Living Streets are alarming – one in five parents have never even considered their child walking to school, despite the majority of children not getting the recommended one hour of physical activity a day and one in five of them leaving primary school overweight or obese. So as the numbers of children walking to school slowly declines over generations – in my mother’s day 94% of children walked to school – how do we reverse the trend?

From the Walk Once a Week (WoW) scheme and outreach projects which Living Streets runs to increase walking rates and reduce the congestion and air pollution which plagues many school gates, we know that children enjoy walking to school.  They enjoy spending time with their friends, it builds their confidence and they like the feeling of independence.

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Getting fitter needn’t be an uphill struggle!

By , 15, May, 2013 8:00 am

Guest blog by Jayne Phenton, Media Co-ordinator for Living Streets @livingstreets

Last weekend I visited Wiltshire and walked seven or so miles up to Bratton Camp and back.

The landlady of the B&B where I was staying was shocked. ‘You must be very fit’, she said.  ‘Jayne walks to work every day’, said my friend.  Her jaw dropped further.  ‘It’s less than two and quarter miles’, I reassured her.

‘I’m the sort of person who parks right outside the shop’, said Mrs Fawlty, looking shame-faced. I suggested she might give walking a go during Walk to Work Week,13-17 May, which is part of National Walking Month run by Living Streets.

I’m fortunate to live a 40 minute walk away from the Living Streets office in London and especially so because my commute takes me across the River Thames and past historic sites like the Tower of London.

But whatever your route, a brisk walk to work is a great opportunity to clear your head, and prepare for your day. Walking is great for your health in every kind of way.  It’s a valuable weight bearing exercise, an excellent work out for your heart, proven to be good for your mental wellbeing and you’re strengthening 200 muscles with minimal impact on your joints.

If you do want to lose a pound or two then building some walking into your day is going to help.  Just half an hour’s walk to work and home again could use up to 250 calories. Sign up on Living Streets’ website www.walktowork.org.uk and you can log your walks, see how many muffins you’ve burned off and compete with your colleagues to see who can be top walker.

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Putting walking on the map

By , 1, May, 2013 8:00 am

May is National Walking Month, Living Streets’ annual campaign to encourage us all to give walking a go, whether it’s Walk to Work Week (13-17 May) or Walk to School Week (20-24 May). Sign up on the website and you can log your miles, take up one of the walking feats, challenge your colleagues and win prizes.  This year’s theme is ‘walking takes you places’.  Here media coordinator Jayne Phenton explores how sometimes it’s helpful to know where that place is.

I am a regular and enthusiastic walker – covering four and a half miles a day on my daily journey to work and back – and regularly striding out across England’s capital.  As an adopted Londoner of over 20 years I can generally negotiate the city sufficiently to orientate myself homewards, but relocate me beyond the M25 and all directional instincts fail.

For over ten years, my friend Adrian and I have made an annual trip to the seaside, usually on the south coast, always confident the sun will shine and equipped with waterproofs.  Our excursions now have a well-rehearsed format.  A stroll from the train station towards the seafront, the requisite fish and chip lunch, then we’ll wander on to the beach, sniff the sea air and decide whether to go left or right.

Whereas as I tend to instinctively suggest ‘this way!’ with a bold hand gesture and an expression resembling an English setter with sight of a pheasant, Adrian will always pause to faithfully consult his Ordnance Survey Map. Given that he has owned some of these trusty charts for well over 30 years, we sometimes come across small discrepancies, but generally cliffs, the coastline and public footpaths which lead inland are still there.

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Everything Happens Somewhere – using local knowledge for national benefit

By , 16, April, 2013 8:00 am

Guest post by Gayle Gander of GeoPlace  (@GayleGander)

Case studies from the 2012 GeoPlace Exemplar Awards have now been published in  book form.

The case studies celebrates the work of Award winning Custodians across the country and demonstrate how Authority Address Custodians and Authority Street Custodians are enabling local authorities to create efficiency savings and support service delivery.

The Custodians are the people responsible for creating and maintaining essential national resources in the form of the National Street Gazetteer and the National Address Gazetteer.  The National Address Gazetteer is a critical part of the AddressBase® range of products which are now widely available, and being used by the public sector through the Public Sector Mapping Agreement (PSMA) as well as by the private sector.

The case studies featured in this book demonstrate the importance of address and street information to local government – with much of the best practice transferable to other organisations across the public sector.

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The Kiltwalk

By , 10, April, 2013 8:00 am

It’s about this time of year when many people start thinking about getting active – the promise of warmer weather and longer days often inspires us to get outdoors more and find the time to exercise.

There are so many fundraising events coming up across the country with hundreds of thousands of people committing to walk, run, cycle and swim to raise money for good causes. At Ordnance Survey, we are often asked to support charity events through providing mapping to work out routes or money and although we can’t support everyone, we are always interested to see what’s going on and hear about the efforts people are making to raise money whilst getting active.

We picked up one particular fundraising effort through an unlikely connection on twitter (more of that later). The Kiltwalk is a Scottish fundraiser (the hint is in the name!) raising money for leading Scottish children’s charities. They organise a series of sponsored walks, with varying options for length and effort around picturesque locations in Scotland.

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A GeoVation update!

By , 9, April, 2013 8:00 am

We’ve just published a GeoVation booklet which includes information on GeoVation Challenges and case studies on winning ideas. For those of our blog followers who aren’t aware, Ordnance Survey’s GeoVation runs innovation challenges, which aim to address problems, which may be satisfied in part through the use of geography.

GeoVation Challenges are open to entrepreneurs, developers, community groups, government and individuals.  They are focussed on finding innovative and useful ways of using geographical information, including open data and tools, to build new ventures that will generate social, economic and/ or environmental value.

The booklet has some interesting facts about GeoVation which has been running since October 2009.  In that time:

  • 1448 participants have registered
  • 509 ideas have been submitted
  • 57 teams have participated in GeoVation Camps and
  • 20 winners have been awarded a share of over £435, 000 in innovation funding to develop their ventures.

We’ve made the booklet available online, so you can find out more about how you can innovate with GeoVation, the GeoVation journey, the ideas we have funded so far and the people who make GeoVation happen.  We’ve also made the case studies available individually– see our case study map.

Download your copy of the GeoVation booklet and find out more!

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England’s New 2,000ft Mountain

By , 3, April, 2013 9:14 am

Guest post by Myrddyn Phillips

The fells of the Pennines form the backbone of England.  They stretch from the border with Scotland southwards to the Yorkshire Dales and to the Peak District in Derbyshire.  They comprise a remote upland habitat of wilderness, bog and vast openness, beautiful on a spring day when skylarks are singing, but somewhat bleak and inhospitable when the weather is inclement.

Amongst this vast tract of wilderness is Thack Moor, a fell that is situated in the Northern Pennines and is positioned above the small village of Renwick.  Its grid reference is NY611462.

Thack Moor has a current map height of 609m, which is very close to the magical imperial height of 2,000ft (609.60m).  As it is generally regarded that mountain status in England and Wales is reserved for those summits at or above 2,000ft, this ‘hill’ had been a priority for G&J Surveys to visit for quite some time.

We first visited Thack Moor in August 2012, making our way to the top from Renwick and carrying all necessary surveying equipment including a level and staff, tripod, Leica Geosystems 530 GPS receiver and pole.  Although visibility was good and the cloud base was above the local fells, the weather forecast predicted heavy localised showers.  While we were using the level and staff to determine the highest point of the fell, the grey clouds sped in from the west and the first of the day’s showers descended upon us.

Image with thanks to G&J Surveys

We found the fell’s high point to be on the northern side of the solid wall that follows the summit ridge.  The fell also has a Trig Pillar which is positioned just on the southern side of this wall.

We gathered two hours of GPS data and descended back to the awaiting car, happy in the knowledge that we’d now made our visit and surveyed Thack Moor.  However, once the data were processed, the result was of so much interest we consulted with Mark Greaves, Geodetic Analyst at Ordnance Survey.  Mark’s advice was to re-visit and gather an additional four hours of summit data.

Autumn soon turned into winter and the thought of spending four hours and more on a bleak Pennine ‘hill’ in the depths of winter did not fill us with joy, so we waited until the start of better weather and longer daylight hours.  Our opportunity to re-visit Thack Moor was on 3rd March and along with Bob Smith, the Editor of the Grough website who was accompanying us for a feature article, we again ascended from the village of Renwick.  Conditions were almost perfect as the cloud base was high, visibility good, and only an occasional wisp of breeze.

Image with thanks to G&J surveys

‘Graham Jackson, Bob Smith and John Barnard beside the Leica GS15 which is positioned on the high point of Thack Moor’

However, once over the summit ridge wall we encountered a bank of thick and solid wind-blown snow that had accumulated against the wall and was stretching out toward the high point of the fell.  Thankfully the high point was just on the edge of the snow and once determined again by level and staff we positioned our new Leica GS15 over it and started our long four hour vigil. After what seemed an eternity the four hours had elapsed and the equipment was then switched off, dismantled, packed away and we finally descended to the friendlier climate of the valley below.

The two data sets were sent to Mark Greaves who kindly processed them.  But what of the result? Would Thack Moor join the elevated ranks of 2,000ft mountains?  The result confirmed by Ordnance Survey is that Thack Moor is 609.62m in height.  So, the ‘hill’ becomes a mountain by just 2cm or in imperial terms no more than ¾ of an inch!

 

John Barnard, Graham Jackson and Myrddyn Phillips

OS OpenData product update – OS Terrain 50

By , 2, April, 2013 10:30 am

At the end of March we saw Ordnance Survey’s free data portal, OS OpenData, upgraded with the release of a new version of OS VectorMap District. Today, sees another significant update to OS OpenData with the release of OS Terrain 50.

OS OpenData users and developers can now access a new fully maintained analytical height product called OS Terrain 50. The new product, which has a similar resolution to Land-Form PANORAMA, will enable users to access an advanced product with consistently maintained height content for the whole of Great Britain.

Land-Form PANORAMA was an unmaintained product and was last updated in the 1990s. The new product will give users more confidence in the currency of the data and will be supplied in additional formats, making it far more accessible.

It can be easily integrated with Vector Map District which is available through OS OpenData, or OS MasterMap Topography Layer and will be a welcome addition to the tools used for terrain analysis and 3D visualisation by a wide range of users.

Arriving as a grid file, it is expected that OS Terrain 50 will be used primarily as an analytical tool for landscape visualisation and analysis over large areas. For example interrogating the visual impact of wind turbines or high-level flood risk assessment, transport infrastructure planning, environmental impact assessment (wind farm location for example), signal propagation (radio, telephone) and security and defence planning

OS Terrain 50 is part of the new OS Terrain family; OS Terrain 5  a mid-resolution DTM, designed to be interoperable with our large-scale data will be released in the near future.

 For now, OS Terrain 50 is available through the OS OpenData portal to download now.

Please select OS Terrain 50 and chose the ‘Supply format’ as ASCII GRID AND GML (GRID) – GB and tick the box to download the files.

Happy Easter – from all over Great Britain!

By , 28, March, 2013 8:00 am

We often celebrate special times of year with a quick look in our place name gazetteer for names based on a theme. In the past, we’ve entertained you with romantic place names for Valentine’s day, spooky place names for Halloween and festive place names for Christmas.

So, as it’s Easter this weekend, today we are taking a whistle stop tour of Easter-related place names. There are so many more than you would imagine and we haven’t put them all on the map, but we’ve picked some of our favourites.

Spot Easter place names across Great Britain

From Good Easter to Easter Cottage and Easterhouse (where my grandparents used to live!) there are plenty of place names staring with an Easter. Sadly, for Scottish football fans, we haven’t included (but haven’t forgotten) Easter Road – the football stadium located in the Leith area of Edinburgh which is home to Scottish Premier League club Hibernian.

But then, we started to get a little more creative and came up with the Isle of Eigg and The Eigg in Shetland, Chocolate Farm in Camarthanshire. Then there’s a Chewton Bunny in Dorset, a Basket in South Lanarkshire and a Bonnethill in Moray. There’s also a Lamb’s Cross in Cambridgeshire which is fairly close to Rabbit’s Cross  and then we came across Bunny Hill and Rabbit Island and a Nest in Cumbria. More spring-like, but still related to Easter is The Chick in Cornwall.

It’s fair to say that Great Britain’s great range of place names can rise to the occasion for just about any special time of the year. Even here, we are usually surprised at just how many relevant and interesting names we can find when we search on a theme!

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Up, up and away – see beautiful Britain from above!

By , 8, March, 2013 1:40 pm

One lucky custom made map maker is in for a treat with our new prize draw starting today!

Anyone buying a custom made map between now and 5 April will be entered into a prize draw to win an amazing Virgin Balloon flight for two*! custom made maps allow you to chose the cover image or upload your own, select the area covered by the map and choose the scale. They make a great gift and come either rolled or folded!

So, if you are up for some romance and adventure and want to explore Great Britain in a slightly different way, order your OS Explorer or S Landranger custom made map now!

Floating around, watching the world go by, is an unforgettable experience, both thrilling and serene. Then there’s the traditional champagne toast – well, it would be rude not too.

Virgin Balloon Flights are the UK’s leading balloon ride providers, flying from over 100 locations across mainland Britain, offering you the ultimate voyage of discovery or the perfect gift for that special someone.

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