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Why the centuries-old Ordnance Survey is still going places

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Rumoured to be heading for George Osborne’s sell-off list, the mapping agency has plotted a route through the digital age to remain a unique asset

On a housing estate in Southampton, surveyor Alyson Whiting is painstakingly recording the outline of a curved flowerbed. One of a small army of field workers for the Ordnance Survey, she is using a tablet computer wirelessly linked to a satellite antenna atop a long pole – affectionately known among the national mapping agency’s staff as a “Gandalf stick”.

The agency’s headquarters previously stood on this site, but now red-brick family homes have sprung up. With them have come new roads, new pavements, new addresses. Whiting diligently records the shape and size of them all.

Related: It’s the £64bn question: what does George Osborne have left to sell off?

From 8,000ft up our remote sensing surveys can spot a single wire fence

Related: Ordnance Survey OS opendata maps: what does it actually include?

Related: A smarter, more digital world must grasp the power of a map

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