Urban and Environmental Historian
November 8th
9:13 AM

DigiPEER

yesterday I took part in a meeting at the Deutsche Bergbaumuseum. A group of institutions that are working in the filed of the history of technology and planning history is currently digitizing parts of their archival holdings. The documents will be available as high resolution images on the internet. The documents they will pull together seem to be very heterogenous, ranging from sketches used to construct V2 missiles in the 1930s to landscape plans prepared in the GDR. I was invited to comment on what the overall use for scientific research interested in space could be in working with these documents. 

June 16th
7:01 AM

Topographical Maps Online

I have been using the TIM-online website and especially the topographical maps drawn between 1891 and 1912 quite a bit lately to identify names of places that have meanwhile been dug away.

May 3rd
10:05 PM
Experimenting with a new mapping technique. I got a print of a 1962 1:100.000 survey map of the Darmstadt area and started adding small details. Creating a past future.

Experimenting with a new mapping technique. I got a print of a 1962 1:100.000 survey map of the Darmstadt area and started adding small details. Creating a past future.

April 28th
8:09 AM
Back in Darmstadt, I have found some time again, to continue drawing maps. I returned to this large city map especially to convert my impressions of London. Still, this city is smaller and less complex, but still…

Back in Darmstadt, I have found some time again, to continue drawing maps. I returned to this large city map especially to convert my impressions of London. Still, this city is smaller and less complex, but still…

March 23rd
3:22 PM

Interactive US-Census Maps

I love this tool …

January 24th
5:37 PM

Map Collection

Today I discovered the “Map Room” at the Leicester Centre for Urban History. I have been working here for 2 months now without knowing of its existence. Great collection of historical Ordnance Survey Maps I want to look into to see if mining is traceable.

January 19th
10:57 AM
A couple of days ago I bought a used 2001 street atlas of London. I went through it quite often and was struck by the combination of narrow and sweeping structures throughout that metropolitan area. Places like Hampstead appear to be little villages with a subway station holding it together - that is what the map tells me. I have never been there. In fact I have never really been to London. But telling from the street atlas - and all the things you know about London - I am very excited to go. It’s definitively on my to-do list for the next couple of weeks. Then I can find out if the actual experience matches my imagination derived from the map. 

A couple of days ago I bought a used 2001 street atlas of London. I went through it quite often and was struck by the combination of narrow and sweeping structures throughout that metropolitan area. Places like Hampstead appear to be little villages with a subway station holding it together - that is what the map tells me. I have never been there. In fact I have never really been to London. But telling from the street atlas - and all the things you know about London - I am very excited to go. It’s definitively on my to-do list for the next couple of weeks. Then I can find out if the actual experience matches my imagination derived from the map.