Anyone know of a source besides online mapping services (Google, Bing, Yahoo, Mapquest, etc) where we can buy good looking vector maps of major cities around the world? Thanks.
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Anyone know of a source besides online mapping services (Google, Bing, Yahoo, Mapquest, etc) where we can buy good looking vector maps of major cities around the world? Thanks.
Beck Kuchkorov
on 02 Dec 10For Japan, ZENRIN is company you should be looking for. http://www.zenrin.co.jp/english/index.html
Wayne Robinson
on 02 Dec 10You could try ZoomInfo.
Also, Google has enterprise licensing agreements for its engine that will allow you to have a local cache, use it in your own private apps and use it without attribution.
Chris
on 02 Dec 10Maps or images?
For maps depending on what you want to do with them, http://www.openstreetmap.org/ might be of use.
If you are after images in Australia then there is http://www.nearmap.com/
JF
on 02 Dec 10Wayne: Are you positive about that? Everything I’ve seen in their enterprise terms of service say no caching and you must still have Google’s logo on the maps.
Mike Roberto
on 02 Dec 10Try http://www.terraserver.com/ , I know their COO, Brian Funk – great guy and they supply maps for movies, multimedia, etc.
JF
on 02 Dec 10Thanks Mike. Can you intro me to Brian? Please email me at jason@37signals… Thanks a million.
Jake Walker
on 02 Dec 10I used to work for Map Resources when I was in high school. It’s vector based stuff, not sat images. Let me know if you want me to introduce you to the owners. www.mapresources.com
JF
on 02 Dec 10Jake: Yes please. Vector is exactly what we’re looking for. Thanks.
Rob
on 02 Dec 10Everyblock’s custom/OSS mapping stack (http://blog.everyblock.com/2008/feb/18/maps/) might be of interest. But they use government data, so you’d need different data suppliers for non-US cities.
Mike Glanz
on 02 Dec 10http://www.axismaps.com/ they look like modern day cartographers/artists. My bet is they could help.
Jes
on 02 Dec 10If you want to create a lot of maps and/or you’d like a lot of control over them, it might make sense to get a copy of something like ArcInfo http://www.esri.com/software/arcgis/arcinfo/index.html This isn’t a product for the causal user, but it can produce some great results.
Another potentially good approach would be to find a shop that specializes in custom maps (a Google search for this term yields a lot of promising sources). I don’t have one to recommend to you, since we have an in-house department that does all our cartography, but there are a lot of other capable shops out there.
Kariuki Marima
on 02 Dec 10Try http://www.ammap.com/ - Its flash though … gives you great control over the map
Marcus
on 02 Dec 10Hey Jason, Viewranger might help you, even though they focus on outdoor, they have some pretty good city data as well.
Ben Atkin
on 02 Dec 10Polymaps and CloudMade might be able to help you with what you’re trying to do. (Example Street Map)
greggles
on 02 Dec 10I second the suggestion of openstreetmap.org and will add in a new one: http://mapbox.com/
Steve Aves
on 02 Dec 10National Geographic: http://www.natgeomaps.com
Chris
on 02 Dec 10http://www.delorme.com/
Has the data, but I have no idea how they package or license it.
David
on 02 Dec 10Do you want maps or map data? You note you want maps like MapQuest, Google, etc. Their maps typically originate from rendering the map data (vectors) from other vendors. Two of the large vendors of map data are Navteq (navteq.com) an Tele Atlas. There are others. Google has recently (2008) created their own core map data they may have put the data in the public domain (I don’t know – rumors).
Ashwin Dollar
on 02 Dec 10What about getting the data from the providers themselves? In case you didn’t know this, Google, Mapquest etc don’t actually own the mapping data. They get it from two major companies, NAVTEQ (owned by Nokia) and TeleAtlas (owned by TomTom). Try contacting one of them. At most they may require copyright notices, though I haven’t once seen that on my Garmin (they use NAVTEQ maps).
Ashwin Narasimhan
on 02 Dec 10Although I would think getting that data would be quite expensive. I should also clarify that many countries such as China don’t allow foreign counties to map them, so you’d have to find local mapping companies.
emptypixels
on 02 Dec 10If you’re interested in FREE, try http://www.openstreetmap.org. Very clean maps similar to google, but you will need to convert them so they are editable in illustrator. (not difficult)
They have a wiki that will walk you through the process.
Enjoy.
Jonas
on 02 Dec 10I think you should take a look at openstreetmap.org There you can get the vector data under a free license, CC-BY-SA in this case. You can either use the data to render your own map tiles with the style you want to have (and serve them as a so called slippymap like e.g. Google does) or you can also use the map data in tools like Adobe Illustrator to create specific maps styled by hand.
DH
on 02 Dec 10Check ESRI ArcGIS. You may want to tap your local research libraries for assistance.
http://library.uic.edu/home/collections/maps-and-geographic-information-systems
Pete
on 02 Dec 10www.randmcnally.com has a good mapping service.
Donna
on 02 Dec 10Not for Tourists has a ton of PDFs for download – I’m pretty sure they’re editable PDFS, but I can find out for sure.
https://www.notfortourists.com/shopViewItems.aspx?catID=PDFs
Bob Shand
on 02 Dec 10I’d suggest OSM data www.openstreetmap.org – rendered with Mapnik www.mapnik.org via the Cairo backend www.cairo-graphics.org
Might be pain to setup – but it works.
Nick
on 02 Dec 10openstreetmap.org, Go to Export tab, export as SVG. Easy as that.
Terry Sutton
on 02 Dec 10Development Seed has developed beautiful looking tilesets using Mapbox . For use with OpenStreetMap.
Reggie
on 02 Dec 10Not trying to be cynical, but does this have anything to do with the Google Maps images on your Customer Wall? I always wondered if that was an approved use of their maps.
Paul McCullough
on 02 Dec 10My favorite tool is Geoserver and Postgresql with PostGIS. Many of my colleagues like Map Server. Bring your own data – OSM data welcome.
Mike
on 02 Dec 10Jason, have a look at Esri, one of the biggest players in GIS. Check out their page about data: http://www.esri.com/data/find-data.html but I’d suggest you to get in touch with them if you need more detailed data or even appliances that have the data loaded already.
Ivan Sheldon
on 02 Dec 10Jason, Please see the message that I sent to your e-mail address. I have been building digital maps and/or in the industry for over six years. Thanks, Ivan
Chris
on 02 Dec 10I met some guys who work here while traveling. I don’t know if they have exactly what you’re looking for, but they are a mapping company.
http://digitalglobe.com/
SMJ
on 02 Dec 10I can’t point you in the right direction without more information.
I’d first want to verify that you require vectors in-hand (typically associated with more cost/work/hassle) or if a pre-processed approach using image tiles (with cartography that’s ready to go) can actually meet your needs. If vectors, I’d need to know if you require raw vector data or a ready-made vector product.
If this isn’t the right place for an explanation of the project, I can do a quick phone call.
Naveen
on 02 Dec 10Jason, you should try www.decarta.com. They are the best choice for a whitelabelled mapping solution. Pretty solid tech, since google maps was on decarta’s platform back when google maps started. And they have more coverage(including China). For the record, I don’t work there, but I did interview with them.
David
on 02 Dec 10http://www.openstreetmap.org/ obviously!
Zach
on 02 Dec 10Jason,
I’d think twice before using OpenStreetMap. It’s not as good as some of the zealots would have you believe and there’s a lot of data quality issues. Here’s a few blog posts I found about some of the issues:
http://www.41latitude.com/post/1310985699/openstreetmap-critique http://www.41latitude.com/post/1349685626/openstreetmap-critique-2
Kent Langley
on 03 Dec 10Might check out http://market.weogeo.com/
David
on 03 Dec 10Have you looked at the USGS? That is primarily all they do. http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod/
Jon Huther
on 03 Dec 10http://www.bjdesign.com/
Will Croft
on 03 Dec 10Sorry to jump on this, but does anyone know of a similar kind of resource for country outlines by lat and lon in any pseudo-CSV format?
I am looking for rough outlines and the data I have found so far is too detailed (think Natural Earth Data, etc.). All I am trying to do is generate a cartogram from outlines so a very simple bounding polygon is all I require.
It also seems to be a struggle to find an export by country with just lat/lon points rather than a shapefile or similar.
Thanks!
howard
on 03 Dec 10I have been looking for city vector maps for years and here is what I know – the mapping companies that own them will never give you a vector image which you can edit yourself – because its like giving away their secret sauce – and their sole souce of revenue. Our agency ended up drawing a master vector map and using this for every subsequent project.
Dave S
on 03 Dec 10Jason. I know you are looking for Vector source for maps, but here is great post from today on how Google has updated the styling of their maps to make them more readable.
http://www.41latitude.com/post/2072504768/google-maps-label-readability
Might be useful tips for mapping plans.
David Cortright
on 04 Dec 10I would try reaching out to the travel guild companies (Lonely Planet, Fodor’s, Frommers, Rough, Moon, etc). Maybe they’d consider licensing their content.
Zach Christoff
on 05 Dec 10I’m suprised no one has mentioned ESRI… Check out their ArcGIS.com site…
This discussion is closed.