
27 September 2007, 6:50pm
GGP wins race to migrate local authorities to new national addressing standard
GGP Systems has spearheaded a nationwide upgrade of local government IT following 100% successful migration of its sites to a new national address standard. The National Land and Property Gazetteer (NLPG): 2006 BS7666 standard is set to further underpin moves toward a definitive national address database giving councils a powerful tool to manage their own local address databases, improve the delivery of services, and take advantage of important new NPLG services.
With a comprehensive migration programme including data conversion services, onsite support and training supplied by GGP Systems, its local authority customers have won the race to complete migration to the new standard – ahead of the crucial October 2007 deadline. The Croydon-based supplier of gazetteer management systems and GIS helped over 30 councils achieve 100% success in migrating their local address databases which form part of the National Land and Property Gazetteer (NLPG).
“We have had a dedicated team of NLPG software specialists and support engineers working long hours over the summer to help ensure our customers made a smooth transition to the new standard. The work to perfect our gazetteer management software has really paid dividends in allowing us to beat the migration deadline across over 30 of our sites that requested our help,” said Tim Maxwell, Managing Director of GGP Systems.
The NLPG enables various local authority departments – from revenue collection and environmental health, to social security and education – to now offer true ‘joined up’ government with benefits that go beyond service delivery. Fraud prevention, tax collection and disaster planning all benefit from the fact that each property is given a ‘Unique Property Reference Number’ for life, transcending numbers, names, descriptions and postcodes.
GGP’s NGz software is specifically designed to manage a Council’s Local Land and Property Gazetteer (LLPG); ensuring a consistent, up to date and accurate record for all property based information. From October 2007 all English and Welsh Councils were required to transfer data to the national NLPG hub in compliance with the new data standard.
GGP NGz also provides an interface between the local authority database, other council property database systems and the NLPG central hub. The new NLPG: 2006 BS766 standard data transfer format, DTF 7.3, includes additional address details including the ability to record the name of occupiers of commercial buildings, land use classifications and associated ward and parish.

Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.HAVE WE REALLY LEARNT THE LESSONS FROM LAST YEAR’S FLOODS?
Flooding costs associated with extreme weather, both financial and emotional, have increased considerably over the last decade, and experts have predicted this trend is set to continue.
Paul Livett, Chairman of GroundSure looks into how increasing the use of flood risk information in property transactions can help to ensure both residential and commercial transactions are conducted on a truly informed basis, with buyers being made aware of environmental risks prior to purchase.
Over 2.2 million homes and small businesses in the UK are located in areas considered at risk of flooding, and the Association of British Insurers (ABI) has said that 570,000 of these face a high risk of flooding. The floods in June and July last year left approximately 48,000 households… More…
Paul Livett
Chairman of GroundSure