
06 July 2007, 6:10pm
Ordnance Survey, the nation’s official mapping agency, is proud to begin highlighting Great Britain’s World Heritage sites in celebration of the country’s magnificent built and natural landscape.
There are 23 World Heritage sites in Great Britain, including Canterbury Cathedral, Hadrian’s Wall and the city of Edinburgh, all of which will now be specially highlighted on Ordnance Survey’s famous and much-loved paper maps.
The OS Landranger Maps, OS Explorer Maps, OS Travel Maps – Road and Tour will now display the whereabouts of these outstanding national assets using a new blue tourist symbol based on the World Heritage logo. It is hoped that by highlighting sites of world renowned significance – like Stonehenge in Wiltshire, and the Ironbridge Gorge in Shropshire – it will encourage people to visit and enjoy them.
David Wright, MP for Telford and Chair of the All‑Party Group on World Heritage Sites, says, “I am delighted that Ordnance Survey has decided to raise the profile of World Heritage Sites in Great Britain, by identifying them not only on the actual map but also in a prominent position on the cover of their published OS Landranger and OS Explorer series”.
World Heritage is part of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), which seeks to encourage the identification, protection and preservation of cultural and natural heritage around the world.
Peter ter Haar, Ordnance Survey’s Director of Products, commented, “This is an excellent addition to our series of much-loved and admired paper maps. This country’s sites of cultural and natural heritage are an irreplaceable legacy and a source of inspiration for the thousands of people who visit them every year. I hope that by highlighting these places an even wider audience will be able to enjoy them.”
www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/leisure

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