Business Traveller

Never get lost again

The mapping technology set to transform your travels

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When was the last time you got lost? Throughout my years of travel, I have spent hours struggling to find my way out of Shinjuku station in Tokyo, been unintentio­nally driven into the desert by a non-English speaking taxi driver in Marrakech, pounded endless dark roads in Beijing in search of my hotel, and almost been robbed by street kids in Paris when wandering into the wrong arrondisse­ment. Research from O2 Travel has suggested UK tourists spend an average of 22 million hours lost abroad each year. And it’s not just holidaymak­ers – even well organised, smartphone­wielding business travellers have this problem. You might not have an internet connection to check your whereabout­s; your driver can’t read the address you have given him; you can’t decipher the street signs – if they exist at all; you’re trying not to draw attention to yourself by looking at a map; or the route you have been given is wrong. It’s stressful, time consuming and can leave you vulnerable. It can also equate to inefficien­cy and a loss of earnings on a grand scale. Think about delivery companies such as UPS, which supply their drivers with trucks without doors to save them a few extra seconds. When a drop-off

location is hard to find, fewer parcels can be signed for in a day.

In 2013, UPS started using computer platform Orion to show optimal routings for the average 120 daily deliveries each of its drivers has to perform on a possible 55,000 US routes. The algorithm, running at 1,000 pages long, is expected to save the company US$300-US$400 million a year when fully up and running in 2017. A saving of one mile a day per driver would mean UPS would be US$50 million a year better off. STREETS WITH NO NAME For consumers, satnavs and navigation apps from Google Maps, Sygic and Waze do a similar job to Orion, helping drivers get around cities and providing real-time alerts for traffic jams and accidents.

The eyes in the sky have delivered us aerial footage of every inch of our planet – Google Earth allows us to fly through 3D-rendered metropolis­es, between canyons and over oceans, while Google Street View has seamlessly stitched together stills of cities in more than 65 countries. The internet giant’s Cardboard project also lets you experience 360-degree panoramas in 3D.

However, what’s been missing from all this is a hyper-specific address system. The UK may be one of the bestaddres­sed countries in the world but more than six million deliveries a year have a problem reaching their addressee. The situation is far worse for the four billion people across the globe who don’t have a legitimate physical address at all – creating problems when it comes to opening a bank account, registerin­g for benefits, getting online, voting or setting up a business.

These aren’t just Syrian refugees, Mongolian nomads and Brazilian slum dwellers – the address system in Tokyo, for example, is opaque and imprecise. Most streets in Japan have no names so you have to rely on the building number.

In the UAE, cities are developing so fast that even locals don’t know where things are. To combat the problem, Dubai began introducin­g “geo-addresses” of ten-digit GPS coordinate­s for every building in the emirate, and earlier this year a new geographic address system started to be implemente­d. Hussain Al Banna, director of traffic at the Roads and Transport Authority, was reported on gulfnews.com as saying: “People should know which district they live in and where they are going, and now it will be easier as the names of districts are written on the signboards of street names.” It seems so obvious.

Much of the rural United States has no address system at all, as described in a 2013 article on West Virginia in The

AtlaAt In McDowell County, “residents picked up their mail at the post office and had Amazon packages delivered to city hall or the bank. Directions were proffered in paragraphs; landmarks [such as] ‘the stone church’, ‘the old sewing factory’… functioned as de facto street signs.” If you needed to call an ambulance or the fire brigade, people had to stay on the phone and tell the operator if they could hear the sirens getting louder, the writer reported.

It was only three years ago that things started to change, at least in this state. Telecom company Verizon agreed to invest US$15 million in “one of the most ambitious mapping projects in recent decades”, working with the local population to create hundreds of thousands of formal addresses. Already home to the small town of Cucumber, West Virginia is now home to Beer Can Alley and Cougar Lane.

THREE LITTLE WORDS As frequent flyers, we’re pretty adaptable, being armed with the necessary experience, technology and on-the-ground assistance to navigate the world’s most daunting cities. However, as we all know, even if we have a driver or are in a familiar destinatio­n, the process of navigation isn’t always as simple as it should be.

I recently tried to order an Uber in Miami, but its seemingly logical grid system wouldn’t allow me to get to Little Havana because I couldn’t type in the intersecti­on I wanted. On top of this, my driver spoke no English and didn’t know the area. With roads miles long, you need an exact address (for example, 3,501 SW 8th) to get anywhere. After driving fruitlessl­y for 20 minutes, I finally made him stop the car. Sometimes travel can make us feel stupid.

One UK start-up, however, is on its way to changing the world. Launched in 2013, What3Words has designed an algorithm that has divided the planet into 57 trillion 3 sqm sections, and then assigned each plot a unique three-word address. For instance, if you want to visit the Blue Lagoon in Iceland (see page 64) then instead of inputting its long GPS code (N63° 52’ 51.646” W22° 26’ 27.985”) into your satnav, you could simply select “richer.jades.apologies” on the app’s map to receive driving directions.

Giles Rhys Jones, chief marketing officer of What3Words, says: “The geospatial industry is worth more than US$150 billion, and has trillions of dollars worth of industry associated with it. However, there is no simple way to talk about location consistent­ly and globally – there are 135 countries in the world that don’t have a good street addressing system. All you have instead is latitude and longitude. It’s incredibly accurate but it’s 18 digits long, so it’s impossible to remember and prone to error when telling others.”

You can use these three-word geocodes to isolate an equipment drop at a convention centre; locate a hard-tofind restaurant or Airbnb apartment in Bangkok; find an unaddresse­d office in Abu Dhabi or a community centre in a South African township; book a drone delivery to a constructi­on site in Paris; or alert authoritie­s to houses in Nepal hit by an earthquake. (People on the ground can share virtual pin drops for buildings that have collapsed.)

Rhys Jones says: “We worked out that with a list of 40,000 words in the English language, 40,000 times 40,000 times 40,000 is 64 trillion, so that gives you enough to do every single square. We’ve taken out homophones, very long words, hyphenated words and rude words, and distribute­d shorter words in places that are going to be more commonly used, such as in central London.” EXPANDING HORIZONS Already available in ten languages, with more on the way, What3Words has so far partnered with more than 50 organisati­ons, including the UN and Hg2 travel guides, to transform everything from e-commerce and aid deliveries to helicopter landing points.

Rhys Jones says: “In Brazilian favelas, millions of people are putting stickers on their houses with their three-word address so Carteiro Amigo can deliver post, and in Tanzania we are being used by the Red Cross to flag up water points contaminat­ed by cholera.” He adds: “Our intention is to be a globally recognised way to talk about location: word.word.word.”

Travel organisati­ons that have so far employed What3Words include the Independen­t Map Company (IDMC), which is a platform for unknown or hidden shops, bars and restaurant­s (visit supporter.spare.hood for Prohibitio­n-era cocktails in Liverpool), and transit app Tripgo, which provides step-by-step routings to pin-drop locations for cyclists, pedestrian­s and people using public transport.

Another is driving navigation app Navmii. Used by more than 24 million people, its maps for 190 countries can be used offline and are being built into in-car systems. Grocery deliveries from Ocado are also powered by Navmii.

Zoe Laycock, its chief marketing officer, says: “We don’t have the resources of Google, of being able to hire vehicles with cameras on the roofs; we wanted to build mapping and local informatio­n through crowdsourc­ing. GPS ‘trace data’ [showing routes that have been driven] is one of the ways we do this, but we also encourage people to get involved through the Open Street Map initiative [openstreet­map.org] – London is a good example of a place where maps are very accurate but in terms of traffic management, speed limits and one-way systems, that can change, and we need users to report these things in real time.”

Navmii is also working on “last mile” navigation. Laycock says: “What you can’t do yet is pinpoint a multistore­y car park that has spaces available. Over the coming months we will be working directly with NCP, for example, to provide that data so you know how many spaces there are free on each floor.” Soon you won’t have any excuse for being late for a meeting.

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