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Scotland needs its own Geospace

Tuesday 24th January 2012
Architecture behind the English and Welsh addresses database. Courtesy:geoplace.co.uk

GeoPlace is one of two winners of the Best Project Delivery category at the 2011 UK Public Sector Digital Awards for the development and delivery of the National Address Gazetteer Database, alongside Surrey County Council for their separate e-safeguarding project. It follows on their European Award. But interestingly Scotland is not in the database. Great opening for a smart Scottish SME operation.

The prestigious awards ceremony – the primary technology awards event for the public sector - celebrates excellence in ICT enabled service delivery across all sectors of government, with eleven categories in total covering current IT innovation and best practice technology implementation at all levels of government.

GeoPlace is a public sector limited liability partnership between the Local Government Association and Ordnance Survey. Combining data from local authorities, Ordnance Survey, the Valuation Office and Royal Mail, the aim of the National Address Gazetteer Database is to provide one definitive source ofpublicly owned spatial address data.Geoplace last award was  European.

Gary Flood, (right) editor of PublicTechnology.net and one of the judges said of the GeoPlace entry “Thejudges were impressed by the sheer size of the challenge faced, which involved synchronising more than 150m records from 5 primary data feeds.”

Richard Mason (left) GeoPlace MD said “Production of this database clearly demonstrates the capability of local government and Ordnance Survey collaborating together through the joint venture – GeoPlace. There are few other public sector infrastructure projects in existence on this scale, able to deliver regular updates of information from local authorities to end users. The development of the project to include the richness of local knowledge from local government and the additional intelligence from our central government partners results in a product which is of national importance.”

Keith Bannister, Head of Public Sector Technology Consulting at awardssponsor KPMG, said: “The quality of the winning nominations, in addition to an over 50% rise is total number of submissions, shows the sheer scale of innovation and talent across our public services”.

 

Postscript: Careers for individual interested in geospatial technology?  

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