Aerial Photography Great Britain Agreement

kenty9x | December 1, 2020 | 0

National coverage of aerial photographs where you can see details such as building extension and land use. First of all, and to be clear, the PUBLIC Sector Geospatial Agreement (PSGA) is still in force and is not affected by this new agreement. THE PSGA is approaching its eighth year (out of 10) and is the agreement that allows public sector organizations to use Ordnance Survey Premium products free of charge (on the site of use). These data sets include OS MasterMap Topo Layer (the high-definition basic assignment) and OS AddressBase Premium (a point representing each addressable property in the UK). These are the levels of mapping data you can see in our online software XMAP and Parish, and they help local government organizations manage their asset management, grass-cutting plans, event planning, neighborhood plans and just about anything you can plan on a map. High-resolution photography gives more details of the floor. The 12.5 cm visual language does not hold an indeterminate licence and, if the contract were to expire after March 31, 2020, it should be returned or purchased an extended licence. As part of this contract, the data – aerial photographs with a resolution of 12.5 and 25 centimetres, 5 metres of digital land and 2 metres of digital surface models (DTM/ DSM) and 50 centimetres of colour infrared images – are now available free of charge to local and central authorities, health agencies, emergency agencies, Parish Councils and other state-funded services across England and Wales. (For users in Scotland, additional charges may be charged.) I`m always dubious about the word “free,” as we all know, you rarely get something for nothing without any kind of channel, or maybe I`m just too cynical?. I`m still quite surprised at everything, because, as we all know, aerial photography is not cheap, is it?! From what I hear is the aerial photography that we can download from 2014/2015, which we currently hold anyway, so I made the registration until I answered all my questions.

The agreement is not just aerial photographs. The records available include: 25cm products and altitude products are licensed indefinitely. The 12.5 cm is granted until the end of the contract (March 2020?) and must then be purchased for reuse (unless a new contract is replaced). The duration of the agreement is two years, with the potential to extend it in the future. So it`s not as long as his Big Brother deal, the PSGA, but it`s still an opportunity for the public sector as a whole to really get their hands on the data that comes out really well. The CONTRACT for the APGB was awarded following a tendering process and is for a period of three years with the possibility of an extension for a further three years. The contract includes the provision of high-resolution aerial photographs, detailed 3D and 3D surface models (DTMs/DSM) and Colour Infra-Red Imagery for all of England, Wales and Scotland and will collect more than 25 TB of data during the contractual period. Members can provide this data in any format that matches their needs. B for example, a regular update via the hard drive or remotely via WMS, an Airbus Defence and Space service. I came back from vacation to find that we were automatically registered with the APGB! It seemed like everything was done in a hurry?! I didn`t even know it was done, so either I didn`t read anything about it or I just forgot! I have not yet “signed” the agreement, because I had a number of questions to ask, and I am concerned that the answers I received were not as profound or explanatory as I had hoped.