Funding awarded to innovative data projects

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  • Ten innovative schemes from across the UK have won government funding to look at new ways of using location-based data to help people in their everyday lives
  • One project will look at ways to use crowdsourced information to create indoor maps to help people find their way around public buildings, such as universities and hospitals
  • Other winners will create a UK database of trees and map the safest routes for cyclists to take through cities

New systems designed to highlight the safest roads for cyclists to use in busy cities, create a database of all the UK's trees, and launch an indoor mapping system to help people find their way around public buildings, could soon be created thanks to a government competition designed to find new ways to use data.

In November, the Minister for Implementation, Oliver Dowden, announced a £1.5 million competition to help organisations find innovative ways to use crowdsourcing and location-based data.

Among the 10 winners are schemes including:

  • Communitree - a Scottish project to collect data on trees from across the UK to create a publicly-accessible database
  • Ride - a London-based project to help cyclists find the safest routes around busy cities
  • Pinpoint - a project to create an indoor mapping system to help people find their way around complex public buildings, such as hospitals and universities

The Minister for Implementation, Oliver Dowden, said:

We are investing in location-based data technology to improve public services and the way people experience them.

I'm delighted to see such innovative ideas come forward, which will help people in their everyday lives and keep the UK at the forefront of this exciting new technology.

London-based Cartographix is one of the organisations which have been awarded funding through the crowdsourcing competition, which was led by the government's Geospatial Commission in partnership with Innovate UK.

By using existing infrastructure, such as WiFi hotspot locations and smartphone sensors, the programmers at Cartographix hope to create a sat-nav-style system for people to use as they walk around public buildings. Organisations would volunteer to have their buildings included on the system and the maps would be made available through existing phone apps.

Anu Joy from Cartographix said:

The aim of our mapping system is to make life easier for people. And we would not be able to do this work without the funding we are receiving from the government.

Also receiving funding are projects to highlight mobile phone signal blackspots, help tackle travel problems experienced by disabled people, and boost public understanding of the planning system.

The projects will be worked on by organisations across the UK and see research carried out by University College London, the University of Warwick, the University of Exeter and the Open University.

A full list of all the winners of the competition can be found below.

Notes for editors

The Geospatial Commission is an impartial, expert committee within the Cabinet Office, set up in April 2018 and supported by £80 million of funding. The Geospatial Commission is chaired by Sir Andrew Dilnot. Nigel Clifford is the Deputy Chair.

The commission has been set up to drive the use of location-linked data more productively, to unlock up to £11 billion of extra value for the economy every year. The commission is currently developing the UK's national geospatial strategy, that it will publish at the end of this year. It is running a range of projects to inform this work.

Competition winners

COMMUNITREE

Project partners: Forest Research, Open University, Treework Services Limited

This project will develop the largest and highest quality urban tree map in the world for use by business, government and other research needs.

YOUR.VU.CITY

Project partners: Vu.City, Pipers Projects Limited, University College London

Vu.City will engage the public with the planning process to improve the understanding of the built environment.

Crowd Blackspot Intelligence for 5G Rollout

Project partners: Ranplan Wireless Network Design, University of Warwick

This project will look at crowdsourcing service complaints to help guide 5G rollout for rural and urban areas.

Crowdsouring for a Digital Geospatial Joint Strategic Needs Assessment

Project partners: City Science Corporation Limited, University of Exeter

Relevant databases will be brought together to enable members of the public to take an active role in health outcomes, by crowdsourcing data such as air quality, to enable practitioners to improve targeting of resources and the health of the nation.

Precision INdoor POsitioning INformation sysTem (PINPOINT)

Project partner: Cartographix LTD

This project will use WiFi networks and smartphone sensors to help better indoor navigation of public buildings.

StreetFocus

Project partners: Cyclestreets, Planit

Communities will be able to automatically identify areas that need improvements to street infrastructure.

Coreo

Project partner: Natural Apptitude

This platform will enable anyone to build and run geospatial citizen science projects to improve collection, management and maintenance of geospatial data.

Routing Innovation through Data Engineering (RIDE)

Project partner: Beeline

RIDE will develop route optimisation to increase cyclist safety and uptake.

Generating crowdsourcing geospatial data

Project partner: Transreport Limited

This project will undertake research to understand the accessibility issues for transportation and the user experience for a wide range of disabilities, and how the data collected can be used to improve the service.

The Neighbourhood safety index

Project partner: Synced LTD

This will produce the first integrated live score of how safe a neighbourhood is.

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