Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
Trimble and GroundProbe Collaborate to Offer Complete Monitoring Portfolio for Geotechnical and Geospatial Mining Professionals
Rating12345Integrated approach means less hassle and more support for...
Space42 and ICEYE Announce Joint Venture to Bring Satellite Manufacturing to the UAE
Rating12345ABU DHABI, UAE —  Space42 (ADX: SPACE42), a UAE-based...
Hexagon appoints new Group Executive Vice President and new President of Hexagon’s Geosystems division
Rating12345 Thomas Harring, currently President of Hexagon’s Geosystems division,...

October 23rd, 2015
OS Data Gives Reality to a Virtual World

  • Rating12345

October 23, 2015 — OS follows up its Minecraft map success to make a virtual Ben Nevis for Oculus and cardboard. The spectacular setting of Ben Nevis provides the backdrop for an Oculus Rift game created by Ordnance Survey developers, in which players race against the clock to find a hidden trig pillar.

The recreation of Britain’s highest mountain has been constructed by OS in 1:4 scale using OS data and covers an area of 10km x 10km. Britain’s mapping agency, with a 224 year history of collecting and using data in imaginative and useful ways, has today also released a virtual reality (VR) tour of the same rugged Ben Nevis mountainscape that is featured in OS’s Oculus Rift game. The virtual tour is available for both iOS and Android devices to be used with Google Cardboard.

The virtual worlds were created in OS Labs, the OS department designated to exploring and assessing ideas for new products and services.

John Abbott, who as Head of Access and Services is responsible for OS Labs, says: “As with the Minecraft maps of Great Britain, we thought the public would be interested in how our data can work in the virtual world, which is why we’ve shared these Oculus and Cardboard experiments. My team continues the long OS tradition of constantly examining the data that’s available and its uses in emerging technologies. We do this to see how we can make our data offerings work better for the public, government, business and partners.”

Abbott continues: “OS has no plans at present to create further virtual worlds, but what we have demonstrated is that it can be done, and in terms of future uses it’s currently the perfect medium for visualisation. It can be used for planning, as a test environment for running scenarios. Put real-world data into the virtual world and you gain a level of experience and understanding of an environment that can only be bettered by actually being there.”

 

Both the Oculus and cardboard versions of Ben Nevis took just two days to create. For the developers (Alex Davies-Moore, an early pioneer of the uses and capabilities of iBeacon technology for geospatial Internet of Things solutions, and David Haynes, a specialist in 3D mapping and virtual reality), these virtual Ben Nevis environments have been an opportunity to bring their external interests into the workplace.

David says: “I’ve been looking into VR for a while now. There’s a natural crossover with my work in 3D mapping. I’ve no doubt the cardboard and especially the Oculus will quickly establish themselves as important in how we consume entertainment. The potential is obvious and massive. Gaming, film, sporting fixtures, gigs and events will be so much more immersive and better — the next best thing to actually being there. There is also a leisure market to consider. These technologies act as a passport for people who want to experience the sights and sounds of places they can’t get to, and as a planning tool for people preparing to visit these places.”

The inclusion of OS’s accurate data gives the virtual world an added sense of reality, and it was the adding in of the data that presented the greatest challenge, as Alex explains: “We used Unity 3D, a well-known and easy-to-use gaming engine, and it took us a while to figure out how to get it to work with and display the data as realistically as possible. The more we play with this technology and experiment with putting real-world data into it, the more realistic these worlds will become, and so the number of commercial end uses increases.”

Virtual Ben Nevis technical details:

Data – 10k square of Terrain 5, with 0.5m resolution imagery from OS OnDemand. Custom workflow written by Alex.

  • Elevation data is loaded as a height map into Unity 3D.
  • Unity’s built in level-of-detail terrain system is used to render the terrain.
  • Oculus’ Rift’s software development kit (SDK) is used to provide VR support for desktop.
  • Google’s Cardboard SDK is used to provide VR support for mobile.
  • Joypad & keyboard input support provided by Unity’s Character Controller asset.
  • Unity’s WebGL deployment platform is used to build the web version.
  • Single project in Unity that outputs for web, mobile and desktop.
  • Trig pillar – custom modelled in Blender, with texture maps from a real trig pillar.

ENDS

Notes to editors

About Ordnance Survey
As Britain’s mapping agency, Ordnance Survey makes the most up-to-date and accurate digital and paper maps of the country. Each day OS makes over 10,000 changes to its database of more than 450 million geographic features. Since 1791 OS content has been used to help governments, companies and individuals work more effectively both here and around the world. The information OS gathers helps keep the nation, economy and infrastructure moving.

About OS’s Minecraft maps
In 2013 OS released the first of its first Minecraft maps with 22 billion blocks representing the 224,000 square kilometres of the country. Using OS OpenData the Minecraft map won OS a Guinness World Record for the largest real-world place represented in Minecraft. The following year OS released an updated Minecraft map of Great Britain which contains a staggering 83 billion blocks.

Watch video of Mr blocks and OS’s GB Minecraft 2

Watch video of a ramble through Snowdonia in GB Minecraft 2

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *