Following a review of our social media presences, we're moving!
You can find future updates from us at Bluesky @maps.sabre-roads.org.uk, or on Facebook via the main SABRE page (https://t.co/hSKvT5X3kd), or of course, via SABRE itself (https://t.co/hSKvT5X3kd).
See you there!
For this #MapMonday, we'll be making sure that all of the Ordnance Survey Quarter Inch #Maps that were published in 1975 are available on SABRE Maps, with the addition of Sheet 6 to add to all the others already available. https://t.co/8kze66teDz
Don't forget that we've also got every single Ordnance Survey Landranger #map from 1975 already online for your delectation and delight. And remember that you can compare them to the 1974 editions (and the previous One Inch maps) using our Map Fader.
https://t.co/Cvqvb94E2h
Happy New Year! And a new year means that another year's mapping drops out of copyright, with OS, OSI and OSNI maps with a copyright date of 1975 now being available to us. As usual, the first is a new OS Route Planning Map for you all to enjoy. https://t.co/7v8arj0oh0
Another map site that we've become aware of, and really like is https://t.co/gMrL9S29fI. It's literally a live map of all buses in Ireland and Great Britain, their location, their route, timetable, and how close they are to being on time. Have a look, and see if you agree!
@a_swift_half@TheReturnOfLCF Well, maybe we could help with that staring for hours with the world's largest georeferenced collection of OS maps at that scale...
https://t.co/LKO3hGvFeF
Try the "Map Fader" button, we're particularly proud of that functionality to compare maps.
For this week's #MapMonday, you can discover the OS London Two Inch Ministry of Transport maps from 1922, and see just where the A1, A2, A3 etc all meet at "point zero" in London. Or not...
https://t.co/2hRh1DOyPv
Looking for Christmas gift ideas? 🎄🎅🏻
Our Skye Bridge anniversary booklet is hot off the press and on sale now! We still have a few left for pre-Christmas dispatch so get your orders in now! 🥳🎄
Order link ⬇️
https://t.co/rXlSJAdaCJ
#archives#Scotland
For those of us who like maps of Europe outside IRL and GB, here's a great new website that we've been made aware of, https://t.co/ltFuEfUjZ3, which has a whole load of mapping of France.
We highly recommend looking at their SCAN50 Historique de 1950 - https://t.co/KXH99KFv5h
Today's ask is simple. We're currently missing some VectorMap District data. Do you have copies that we don't have that you can share with us? If so, please DM us!
We're looking for both Vector (Shapefile) and Raster (TIFF) mapping from before May 2019.
Can you help?
We like to mention sometimes that we have the world's largest freely available repository of relevant Ordnance Survey OpenData #maps - and there's still future plans to bring more. However, as we also periodically ask, we are missing some mapping from our archive.
And as always, you can compare the Lancashire Road Plan with what really happened, comparing it with every historic and modern map layer available on SABRE Maps. https://t.co/5VbBTxWBWD
OK, so how many people guessed that 1949's Road Plan for Lancashire would be the plan we referred to yesterday? The LRP was an ambitious post-war highway blueprint now available on SABRE Maps Alongside it, the SABRE Wiki now carries detailed chapter summaries and commentary.
You can now explore every map, every route, every chapter of the Lancashire Road Plan on SABRE Maps, with fresh companion articles on the SABRE Wiki breaking down the detail. A monumental piece of British road history — finally fully accessible.