Map Warping the NYC City Atlases

 

18 April 2014

The New York Public Library “has now scanned nearly all of its public domain New York City atlases (a collection of now more than 10,000 maps) … and built a web tool … where users both inside and outside the Library can virtually stretch old maps onto a digital model of the world à la Google Maps or OpenStreetMap, thus creating a new copy that is not only aligned with spatial coordinates on the Earth, but normalized across the entire archive of old maps. …

“When we make a digital image of a map, there is nothing inherently geographic about it. It, like a photograph of a person or building, is a mass of pixels of varying color. A computer cannot presently look at pixels on a map and divine its geographic locale. This is where map warping comes into the picture. Using the tool we’ve created at maps.nypl.org, we enable users to geolocate pixels on a map.  …

“Once we’ve done that, we can walk this digital spatial object through a workflow, adding useful information and context with each step. All of this is done collaboratively, through the piecemeal efforts of staff, volunteers, and interns, a group of roughly 1,500 participants worldwide.” --- Matt Knutzen, Map Division, NYPL

For a much more detailed explanation of the project, and a gateway to the maps, click  http://www.nypl.org/blog/2012/01/10/unbinding-atlas-working-digital-maps