New York Public Library released thousands of free historic maps
Last week the New York Public Library released a huge collection of over 180,000 digitaized maps, images and other resources. Basically all out-of-copyright materials in NYPL Digital Collections are now available as high-resolution downloads. Without any permissions or restrictions. You can use everything!
And there are quite a lot of resources to be used. I got 24,213 results when searching for the term “Map”. When you browse it for a while you can find a real gems like “The Brooklyn of the future” map from 1903.
Digitizing millions of maps, pages and images has been happening in libraries, museums and other institutions for at least a decade already. But the NY library’s initiative brings it to a totally new level. It actually stimulates to what happens next with the data.
“We see digitization as a starting point, not end point,” said Ben Vershbow, the director of NYPL Labs, the in-house technology division that spearheaded the effort. “We don’t just want to put stuff online and say, ‘Here it is,’ but rev the engines and encourage reuse.”
Developers can use on the public domain files as machine-readable data, using the library’s open software interfaces or their own tools. To provide inspiration for reuse, the NYPL Labs team has released couple of cool demonstration projects. My favourite one is comparing Fifth Avenue images from the beginning on the XX-th century with corresponding Google StreetView images from 2015. Another awesome tool is a visual browser allowing users to explore the public domain collections at scale.
NYPL gave a great example of how public institutions should open their resources and share the knowledge which was stuck somewhere between shelves, covered in dust for decades. We are sure that GeoGeeks will find some awesome applications for all this maps and other resources.
Great initiative!