
04 March 2008, 11:11am
Britain is taking a leading role in the standardisation of public information in Europe after local government-backed national property and street ID coding systems were chosen from many submitted from across Europe. Local Government’s address and street datasets, the National Land and Property Gazetteer (NLPG) and the National Street Gazetteer (NSG) have been accepted as reference data models under the INSPIRE directive.
With no common standards for spatial data across Europe, INSPIRE seeks to lay down rules for interoperability and harmonisation. It will establish a framework for coordinating the use and implementation of such data for the purposes of Community environmental policies. The established standards will enable users to identify and access spatial or geographical information from a wide range of sources, for applications including:
• Location and exploitation of natural resources – minerals, soils, vegetation, landscape
• Viewing and analysis of networks – transport, water, energy and telecoms
• Location and distribution of people, businesses, assets, new developments, services and other built infrastructure
• Coordination of responses to emergencies, natural and man made disasters – floods, epidemics and terrorism
The NLPG was one of two data specifications accepted from across Europe to go forward to the Addresses and Technical Working Group. The NLPG was selected because it is built on BS7666, the UK implementation of ISO 19112. The NLPG was singled out for its implementation of the standard at local level enabling aggregation of data at a national and trans-national level (England-Welsh).
The NSG is one of ten data specifications that have been recommended for transport networks, included for its adherence to ISO 19112, its current use for highway maintenance and utility street works and its multi-lingual capabilities (English and Welsh).
As recognised experts in this field, Intelligent Addressing, the custodians of the NLPG since its inception, has been invited to join the Addresses Technical Working Group. The Group aims to create a Europe-wide data standard for any new address datasets. From 2009 any new address datasets across Europe will have to accommodate the agreed data structure and any existing datasets by 2016.
“The decision to include the NLPG and the NSG as data specifications for INSPIRE vindicates the vigorous processes that local authorities across England and Wales have been working to over the past eight years,” said Steve Brandwood, Geographic Information Team – Programme Manager at IDeA. “I am pleased that other users across Europe will now be able to benefit from the experience gained from the UK implementation of ISO 19112.”
Intelligent Addressing Contact:
Gayle Gander, Head of Marketing
T: +44 (0)207 747 3500, E-mail: queries@nlpg.org.uk, www.intelligent-addressing.co.uk www.nlpg.org.uk www.thensg.org.uk
IDeA Contacts:
Steve Brandwood, Programme Manager
T: +44 (0)20 7296 6615 E: steven.brandwood@idea.gov.uk
Media: Paul Bailey +44 (0)20 7296 6529

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