Mapping
initiatives aim to provide more detail about what is found along streets and
roads
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In Benin's economic
capital of Cotonou, as in many other African cities, finding a house, office or
restaurant is often like a treasure hunt.
Crowdsourced
mapping applications adapted for use in Africa are trying to help people find
their way in cities where haphazard development means many streets and
buildings are unmarked
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Luck,
if not a miracle, is required as easy clues such as street names, even where
they exist, are usually not posted and address numbers are rarely marked.
Most
people in Cotonou formulate complex combinations of landmarks and directions to
navigate around town.
Typical
directions might be: "My office is after the big market, past the
apartment block on the right with the mobile phone mast, and it's the third
road on the left, tiled building."
Can't
see the apartment block with the mobile phone mast? Game over, back to square
one.
Sam
Agbadonou, a 34-year-old former medical technician, knows how frustrating it
can be to get around and describes Cotonou as a "navigation
challenge".
"I
was called when there were break-downs and went to health centres to repair
machines that save lives," he said.
"But
some centres are really in the middle of outlying neighbourhoods and it is
difficult to get there."
Now,
to put an end to the hassle and quickly find their destination, locals are
turning to crowdsourced mapping applications adapted for use in Africa that are
challenging Google Maps for dominance on the continent.
- 'Map party' -
In
2013, when Agbadonou heard about OpenStreetMap, an international project
founded in 2004 to create a free world map, he knew it was a good idea.
Agbadonou
founded the Benin branch of the project, which today boasts 30 members.
With
his friend Saliou Abdou, a trained geographer, Agbadonou regularly organizes
"map parties" -- field trips to identify the city's geographical
data.
They
start with the basics -- street names and address numbers -- and move on to
other details that set their maps apart from the Silicon Valley competition.
"We
write down everything: the trees, the water points, the volcanizer (tyre
repairer) on the street corner, the tailor's shop... . You don't see that on
Google Maps!" Agbadonou said with pride.
Thanks
to his work over the last four years, Cotonou is slowly revealing itself.
For
example, the Ladji district, which never used to feature on most maps, is now
included.
Armelle
Choplin, an urban planner at the Institute of Research for Development (IRD) in
Cotonou, has no choice but to use Google Maps for her work.
But
she is relying more and more on the crowdsourced maps which are more adapted to
an African context.
"IGN
France (the French national institute of geographic and forest information)
carried out an aerial mapping of Benin between 2015 and 2016 and it should be
available in September," Choplin said.
"But
we don't know if we will have access or the terms."
- Social inclusion -
Rapid
population growth, lack of regulation in real estate and haphazard urbanization
are a headache for most big cities in Africa.
Along
the coast in Ghana, Sesinam Dagadu created a similar mobile app called
SnooCode, which targets the poorest in society and the illiterate.
His
goal is to give "an address for every man, woman and child" by
issuing an individual "location code" as a substitute address.
"I
wanted to make sure our system was accessible to those at the bottom of the
social pyramid," Dagadu said about his app, which is free.
"Without
addresses, many important features of the modern society no longer work, from
tracking diseases and emergency response services to e-commerce and
deliveries," said the 31-year-old.
- Citizenship -
OpenStreetMap
is already being used by humanitarian organizations during epidemics.
Enthusiastic
communities of amateur cartographers participating in 'mapathons' have been
inputting geographical data from satellite images available on the internet
into the online map.
Some
have recently focused on the Democratic Republic of Congo, where several cases
of Ebola have been reported.
In
particularly remote areas of a country, maps only show the outline of roads.
The
cartographers add houses and, crucially, water points -- essential data to stop
the spread of an epidemic.
For
volunteers or the app's creators, map-making isn't just a passion, it's become
a part of what it means to be a citizen.
As geographer Abdou puts it, working on the maps is his way of "contributing to the development of my country".
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