Gaia GPS
  • Explore The Map
  • Get the App
  • Upgrade Today
  • Explore The Map Catalog
  • New Features
    • Gaia GPS

      The Hike Map That Broke Me: How Gaia…

      April 24, 2025

      Gaia GPS

      Introducing the Gaia Hike Map

      March 18, 2025

      Gaia GPS

      Unlock a New Level of Personalization in Gaia…

      December 12, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      Goodbye Clutter, Hello Streamlined Maps: Introducing Sync to…

      November 26, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

      August 15, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      2023 Mapped: Our Best New Features of the…

      December 27, 2023

      Gaia GPS

      Discover Adventure Easier Than Ever with New Map…

      July 27, 2023

    • New Maps
      • Gaia GPS

        Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

        August 15, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        Find Prime Viewing for Total Solar Eclipse with…

        March 27, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        See the World More Clearly with New Gaia…

        May 18, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Gaia Classic: The Only Map You’ll Ever Need?

        May 4, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Why NatGeo Trails Illustrated are America’s Favorite Maps

        February 9, 2023

        Backcountry Skiing

        Find Backcountry Skiing in Gaia Winter Map

        January 11, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Our Favorite New Maps and Features

        December 23, 2022

  • Activities
    • Backcountry Skiing
    • Boating
    • Emergency Response
    • Fishing
    • Offroading
  • Adventures
    • User Stories
  • Help
Top Posts
The Hike Map That Broke Me: How Gaia...
A Fond Farewell to National Geographic Maps —...
Introducing the Gaia Hike Map
Download the app and get a free 14-day...
Gaia GPS is Improving Satellite Imagery: Saying Goodbye...
How I Used Gaia GPS to Navigate Italy
Gaia GPS x Toyota: A New Way to...
Download Gaia GPS– iOS & Android App
Unlock a New Level of Personalization in Gaia...
Important Update: Changes to Esri World Imagery Offline...
Gaia GPS
  • Explore The Map
  • Get the App
  • Upgrade Today
  • Explore The Map Catalog
  • New Features
    • Gaia GPS

      The Hike Map That Broke Me: How Gaia…

      April 24, 2025

      Gaia GPS

      Introducing the Gaia Hike Map

      March 18, 2025

      Gaia GPS

      Unlock a New Level of Personalization in Gaia…

      December 12, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      Goodbye Clutter, Hello Streamlined Maps: Introducing Sync to…

      November 26, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

      August 15, 2024

      Gaia GPS

      2023 Mapped: Our Best New Features of the…

      December 27, 2023

      Gaia GPS

      Discover Adventure Easier Than Ever with New Map…

      July 27, 2023

    • New Maps
      • Gaia GPS

        Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

        August 15, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        Find Prime Viewing for Total Solar Eclipse with…

        March 27, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        See the World More Clearly with New Gaia…

        May 18, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Gaia Classic: The Only Map You’ll Ever Need?

        May 4, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Why NatGeo Trails Illustrated are America’s Favorite Maps

        February 9, 2023

        Backcountry Skiing

        Find Backcountry Skiing in Gaia Winter Map

        January 11, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Our Favorite New Maps and Features

        December 23, 2022

  • Activities
    • Backcountry Skiing
    • Boating
    • Emergency Response
    • Fishing
    • Offroading
  • Adventures
    • User Stories
  • Help
Tag:

maps

Company NewsGaia GPS

Welcome Map Specialist Kate Dougherty

by Ashli Baldwin May 18, 2016
written by Ashli Baldwin

Kate Dougherty started working with the Gaia GPS team last year, both on stage, and behind the scenes. As of this week, she’s working full-time as the first Gaia GPS Cartographer, or maybe a better title is “Cartographer, GIS Specialist, and Technical Writer.”

So far, you may have read Kate’s technical writing on the blog, including “Map Your World with OpenStreetMap” and “How to Read a Topo Map”. If you are a hunter, you will also appreciate the GIS work Kate did the last couple of months, and ongoing, to build an open set of hunting and boundary data to improve Gaia GPS hunting maps.

To start her career, Kate studied physical geography in college, and earned a masters in library science at Drexel. Kate worked as a librarian for several years, and took up web design while working for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). After realizing how much she enjoyed learning about technology, she entered a graduate certificate program in GIS. She spent time volunteering with local land trusts, the Gulf Restoration Network, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Kate has also done a great deal of writing throughout her career. You can find her writing in Earth Island Journal Online, Entelligent, Civil Eats, Next City, and the American Society for Mechanical Engineers.

A lifelong nature lover and avid hiker, Kate considers herself a gypsy. She’s lived in Washington, D.C., Fayetteville, Arkansas, and New Orleans. For now she lives near her family in Philadelphia, but eventually plans to settle down in the beautiful front range area of Colorado.

me_waterfall_cropped_small

May 18, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
How to Embed Gaia Maps and Data on Your Website
Gaia GPSHow-ToNew Features

How to Embed Gaia Maps and Data on Your Website

by Aileen May 10, 2016
written by Aileen

You can now embed a map view on your own blog or website to display a track, route, folder, or other data you create in Gaia GPS.

How to Embed Gaia GPS in Your Website

1. Log into your Gaia GPS web account.

Gaia GPS log in

Go to gaiagps.com and log into your account.

2. Find the track you want to embed.

Gaia GPS account options

In righthand corner, hover cursor over profile picture. Click “Tracks.”

My Tracks page on Gaia GPS

On “My Tracks” page, make sure the track is Public. Click the track you want to share on your website.

3. Embed your track.

Gaia GPS embed track code to your website

Share the track by clicking on the embed button to get the code to paste onto your website or blog.

Embed code for Gaia GPS tracks

Copy and paste the embed code onto your website or blog.

4. Track preview

The view shows the Gaia GPS Topo map source with data overlaid, and it includes statistics and a link back to the source data.

Feedback Requested

Help to improve this “embedding” feature by sending your comments to support@gaiagps.com. Say how you use, or would use, the embedding feature, and what would make it better for you.

Embedding could potentially include many customization options, or different layouts that show larger maps, or perhaps photos.

May 10, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPSNew Maps

New HD Maps Available Now

by Ashli Baldwin May 5, 2016
written by Ashli Baldwin

As of today, you can use HD maps in Gaia GPS for OpenLandscapeMap, OpenHikingMap, and OpenCycleMap.

These sources work great on retina and high resolution devices. The addition of HD maps answers a common request for the ability to increase text-size on higher resolution displays.

How to Add HD Maps

To add the new maps, open the “More Layers” menu. Find OpenHikingMap and OpenCycleMap under “Gaia Recommended” and OpenLandscapeMap under the “OpenStreetMap” heading.

View instructions for adding maps for Android and iOS.

Previously Shipped, Now Live

The last iOS and Android releases actually included HD map capabilities, but due to an issue with existing app installs, we had to wait a week to make the maps available. Check out the new maps today, and email support@gaiagps.com with any comments.

giffinal

May 5, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPSNew Maps

OpenHikingMap, OpenCycleMap, and OpenLandscapeMap in HD

by Ashli Baldwin April 18, 2016
written by Ashli Baldwin

HD versions of OpenHikingMap, OpenCycleMap, and OpenLandscapeMap will go live soon in Gaia GPS for iOS and Android. The just released Gaia GPS for Android v6.3 and Gaia GPS for iOS v10.5 (due out this week) include HD map capabilities, but we need to wait to unlock the capability until after the releases.

With HD resolution, text and symbols on the maps appear larger and crisper on retina devices.

When is Soon?

Once most users have made the update in both iOS and Android, we’ll unleash the HD maps, and make an announcement. Expect the sources to be available next week, and follow @gaiagps on Twitter for updates.

Many More Maps to Come

Over the course of the summer, we’ll roll out a bunch of new and improved map sources. Besides HD maps, we also recently added Spain IGN Topos (check out the blog post here). We now have other international topos in the queue too, along with an update for Gaia Vector Topo.

If you have ideas for maps for Gaia GPS, have a look at this map idea megathread on ideas.gaiagps.com. Many users participated in this Idea Forum thread about size improvements to the OpenStreetMap-based sources, and the Idea Forum has a big impact on Gaia GPS product roadmap.

Questions? Email support@gaiagps.com.

April 18, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPSNew Maps

Spain IGN maps for all Gaia GPS users

by Ruthie Irvin April 18, 2016
written by Ruthie Irvin

We have an exciting new map source available free for all Gaia GPS users—the official IGN topo maps for Spain.

IMG_6562
You can find Spain IGN Topo in Gaia GPS, under the International category, by following these instructions:

Add map sources in Gaia for iOS
Add map sources in Gaia for Android

We want to provide the best, most up-to-date maps available for the whole world, and constantly search for ways to improve the Gaia sources list. Add your requests to this existing Idea Forum thread about additional map sources.

If you have any other questions or feedback, reach out to us at support@gaiagps.com.

April 18, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
AdventuresGaia GPS

Maps and Tracks for the Entire Appalachian Trail

by Ashli Baldwin April 11, 2016
written by Ashli Baldwin

Download a full dataset of maps and tracks for the Appalachian Trail on gaiagps.com. The organized folders include official trail and waypoint data from the Appalachian Trail Conservancy. Sync the folders to your Gaia GPS app or download in GPX or KML format to your desktop, and help aggregate data by becoming a contributor.

Disclaimer: This data has not been updated since 2016 so may be incorrect where trail relocations have taken place.

Maps for the Appalachian Trail
Appalachian Trail on gaiagps.com. Map Source: Terrain by Stamen Design, under CC BY 3.0. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors

Well-Organized, Comprehensive, and Authoritative

Add the entire trail to your account on gaiagps.com, or choose by state. Individual state folders include the Official ATC track and data for important POI categories like shelters and parking areas.

Folders include convenient, pre-selected OpenHikingMap downloads to match the tracks— for use with the Gaia GPS app.

Adding to Your Gaia GPS Account

Data for the entire Appalachian Trail
Track and waypoints for the Appalachian Trail
  1. Visit the Appalachian Trail folder on gaiagps.com
  2. Select “+ Add to My Folders” to add the data-set, or select a sub-folder for a specific state
  3. Sync the added data directly to your device
  4. Resume map downloads over WiFi before heading out on the trail

New National Geographic Appalachian Trail (AT) base map available

Available now (May 2018), the NatGeo Appalachian Trail premium base map includes detailed topographic information, marked trails, camping areas and shelters, and navigational aids. Learn more on how to add the NatGeo Appalachian Trail map to Gaia GPS as you plan your AT hike.

NatGeo Appalachian Trail map Gaia GPS layer of Mount Katahdin

View all of the maps, tracks, and waypoints for the Appalachian Trail here.

Or view by State:

  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Maine
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in New Hampshire
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Vermont
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Massachusetts
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Connecticut
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in New York
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in New Jersey
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Pennsylvania
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in West Virginia and Maryland
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Northern Virginia
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Southern Virginia
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in North Carolina and Tennessee
  • Maps and Tracks for the Appalachian Trail in Georgia

How you can contribute to this project

Email ashli@gaiagps.com with additions, errors, or feedback of any kind.

To contribute, consider sending us waypoint descriptions, pictures, vistas or water sources and send us a link to your waypoint on gaiagps.com.

April 11, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPS

Gaia GPS & China’s GPS Restrictions

by Kate Dougherty February 8, 2016
written by Kate Dougherty

In the interest of national security, the Chinese government strictly controls geographic data, and deliberately skews maps of the country to protect sensitive buildings and facilities. These restrictions cause offsets in the data when using GPS navigation or digital maps, but the OpenStreetMap (OSM) based maps in Gaia GPS don’t have this problem, and this makes apps like Gaia GPS popular in China.

You can find hiking, cycling, and topo maps based on OpenStreetMap in Gaia GPS. Check out these Knowledge Base links to learn how to change your visible layer to an OSM-based source in the iOS or Android versions of Gaia GPS.

Apple Maps Work, but iOS Photos and Apps Have Issues

Because Apple is an authorized mobile provider that has purchased a “shift correction algorithm,” Apple Maps will display your current location correctly on an iPhone. However, the GPS offset still causes a number of problems on iOS devices:

  • Your phone will offset geotagged photos. Similarly, some cameras with GPS chips may not display coordinates for users in China either.
  • Google Maps will only display the correct location on an Android phone, an iPhone user who recently visited China explained.
  • Apps that show your friends’ whereabouts will offset their locations by 300-500 meters, or about a block or two.

GPS, Mapping, and Chinese Law

OSM’s contributors build the map by collecting GPS traces and by tracing features from satellite imagery. Despite legal restrictions, a lot of this mapping has been done in China. Our recent blog post explains how to contribute to OSM, but keep in mind that due to restrictions on private mapping activities, doing so in China is illegal.

The restrictions apply to all types of geographic data; the country’s Surveying and Mapping Law effectively makes private surveying and mapping off-limits in mainland China. While the government has provisions for academic research, foreigners must obtain approval from the State Council and partner with the relevant authorities when conducting fieldwork. Individuals who break the rules can face confiscation of equipment, interrogation, and even jail time. China takes the matter very seriously, as evidenced by the nearly 40 illegal mapping cases it prosecuted from 2006-2011. Law enforcement has detained and questioned geologists and other scientists for recording what they believed to be innocuous GPS coordinates for their research.

How to Circumvent the GPS Restrictions in China

When you’re on the ground in China, using an OSM-based map is the best way to get accurate locations. In addition, if you’re a programmer working with geotagged photos or other geodata, there are several open source scripts that can help you convert WGS coordinates to GCJ-02.

Programmers can choose from scripts in C#, R, Python, PHP, Ruby, and Objective-C to georeference locations correctly. While the authors of the scripts probably used leaked code to create them, other solutions use the accurately aligned data from the Chinese version of Google Maps. Some fixes use statistical regression to interpolate GWS-84 coordinates from this version.

Did You Know? Google Maps and Displacement

You may notice the displacement when using satellite imagery in Google Maps (compared to a road map), and particularly when looking at major roads. For example, in the screen shot below, Google offsets the marked highway interchanges near the Capital Library and Beijing Vansha Outlets Shopping Center to the northeast on the street map.

Misaligned interchanges and major roads in Beijing. Credit: Google Inc.

Misaligned interchanges and major roads in Beijing. Credit: Google Inc.

This is because location-based service providers like Google must obtain authorization from the Chinese government to offer digital street maps of China, and buy a “shift correction” algorithm. In order to comply with the law, these companies must use the country’s proprietary, encrypted GCJ-02 coordinate system, rather than the most commonly used WGS-84 system. The satellite imagery uses the “true” coordinate system, while the street map uses the skewed Chinse system. Dan Dascalescu investigated this shift by searching maps.google.com for the known WGS coordinates of the Monument to the People’s Heroes in Shanghai (31.24427 N, 121.48695 E).

Google’s street map retrieves a location in the middle of the Wusong River, while in reality you’ll find the monument several hundred meters to the southeast, at the intersection of the Wusong and Huangpu Rivers.

Searching on known WGS latitude and longitude coordinates for a Chinese landmark retrieves an incorrect location in Google Maps. Credit: Google Inc.

Searching on known WGS latitude and longitude coordinates for a Chinese landmark retrieves an incorrect location in Google Maps. Credit: Google Inc.

Activating the satellite imagery reveals pronounced misalignment, as shown in the screenshot below. The marker appears in the correct position on the imagery.

Google.com street maps do not align with satellite imagery in China. Credit: Google Inc.

Google.com street maps do not align with satellite imagery in China. Credit: Google Inc.

Apple Maps has the same displacement issue. Searching on the WGS coordinates will pinpoint the correct location on the imagery, but not on the map. Apple doesn’t display the street map’s road network when imagery is activated, which makes the effect less jarring. Still, the bevvy of hotels it displays in the middle of the Wusong River give the displacement away.

Apple Maps also mismatches satellite imagery and road maps in China. Credit: Apple Inc.

Apple Maps also mismatches satellite imagery and road maps in China. Credit: Apple Inc.

The misalignment does not appear on the Chinese version of Google Maps, since both the imagery and the map use the state-mandated coordinate system. Users can pinpoint the correct location of the monument on both sources by searching for the GCJ-02 coordinates (31.2423 N, 121.4914 E). Similarly, maps from the Chinese company Baidu line up correctly. In addition, manufacturers evidently modify GPS devices sold in China to align with GCJ-02 maps. “It is still unclear whether GPS chips manufactured in China return GCJ-02 coordinates directly to match approved Chinese maps, or if they return WGS-84 coordinates, which authorized map software providers can convert to GCJ-02,” a Wikipedia article on the subject states.

The Chinese version of Google Maps shows the monument in the correct location on both the imagery and the street map when a user searches for its GCJ-02 coordinates. Credit: Google Inc.

The Chinese version of Google Maps shows the monument in the correct location on both the imagery and the street map when a user searches for its GCJ-02 coordinates. Credit: Google Inc.

However, because the cartographic regulations do not apply in the special administrative regions (SAR) of Macau and Hong Kong, Google will always scramble the map at the borders of these SARS and mainland China.

China’s GPS Restrictions - Google Maps near the Hong-Kong-Shenzhen border. Credit: Google Inc.

Google Maps near the Hong-Kong-Shenzhen border. Credit: Google Inc.

February 8, 2016
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPS

Map Your World with OpenStreetMap

by Kate Dougherty August 24, 2015
written by Kate Dougherty

Map your favorite places, and join a global movement that makes data free and open to all people. This guide will teach you to edit OpenStreetMap (OSM).

OpenStreetMap: More Than Roads

Whether you’re hiking in the woods or driving in town, you can edit the map near you to make it accurate and more complete. OpenStreetMap uses the local expertise of contributors to crowdsource detailed maps of the world, and anyone can use the data, provided they credit OSM.

Started in 2004, the number of OSM editors has grown from 1,000 on Christmas Day 2005, to more than two million today. The services now gains an average of 8,000 new users each month. OSM reached 20 million edits early last year, and its explosive growth shows no signs of slowing.

Reasons to Edit the Map

People contribute to OSM for all sorts of reasons:

  • Remote Forests and Trails – While U.S. government agencies like the U.S. Geological Survey provide topo maps to the public for free, the governments of other countries charge a fee for their maps. People have banded together to make free – and sometimes better – maps through OSM.
  • Local Maps – Some contributors want good local maps. For example, the OSM map of Berlin is probably better than any map in the world, because the Germans love OSM.
  • Crisis – In crisis, mappers pool their efforts to improve the OpenStreetMap so that first responders and emergency aid workers can navigate the affected areas.

And from personal experience, you feel a bit like a better person when you edit the map.

Getting started with OpenStreetMap.org

In the following example, I’ll show you how I made some edits to my own neighborhood.

The first step is to create an account with OSM at http://www.openstreetmap.org/. There are other tools you can use to edit the map, but this is the most common way.

Explore an Area

Enter an address, zip code, or city to search for the area you want to explore. Or, just click the Show My Location button (the arrow below the zoom controls on the right).

Your search results will appear on the left.

Openstreetmap

The map will center on your chosen location on the right; the place’s tags (attributes, or descriptive information) are shown on the left.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

You may not recognize many of the tags, but don’t worry… editing is simple.

Editing OSM

Now, you’ll need to find something that needs to be added or changed. When I first registered with OSM, I didn’t know where to start, but after poking around for a few moments, I found plenty to do.

The basic steps are:

  • Click the Edit button at the top of the screen to enter edit mode. Microsoft Bing aerial imagery will load in the right pane, with existing OSM features superimposed on top.
  • Trace over the imagery to add roads, buildings, and other missing features.

I recommend you go ahead and do the built-in walkthrough on openstreetmap.org. Then jump in and improve the map near you.

Editing From the Field

We’re focusing here on using aerial imagery to help improve the map. But another way (and some say the pure way) to improve OSM is to collect data directly from the field.

Here are ways you can collect data to help edit OSM:

  • Go find out the name of a feature on the map. While tracing from imagery is helpful, tagging new features adds a whole other dimension to the data.
  • The next time you’re out on a trail, record what you can do there (hiking, biking, horseback riding, etc.)
  • Mark the exact coordinates of features in the field, using an app like Gaia GPS
  • Record hikes and drives of unknown roads and trails with GPS apps

Since aerial imagery can be years old, your tracks and waypoints will provide the most up-to-date information for OpenStreetMap. See the end of this article for a list of resources and tools to help you edit the map.

Editing from Imagery

Look at minor roads in off-the-beaten path areas. Parks are another good place to start, since many of them lack information for restrooms, foot paths, playgrounds, and other features. You’ll get a kick out of this, and spend more time than you think fixing your local haunts.

I started by homing in on a local ball park, and found neither the baseball diamond, nor the park road featured on the map.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

Adding New Features

To add a new feature, you’ll use the tools at the top of the right pane.

  • The Point tool drops a map marker at a point of interest.
  • The Line tool traces roads, rail lines, trails, bike paths, footpaths, and other linear features.
  • The Area tool lets you add detailed footprints of buildings, schools, businesses, lakes, swimming pools, and more.

No matter which tool you choose, you’ll want to zoom in far enough to be able to mark features accurately.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

Line features, as they appear in OSM.

Adding a Road or Path

In this example, I’ll add the minor road with the Line tool, and the ballpark with the Area tool.

To begin adding a road or path (what OSM calls a “way”):

  • Select the Line tool at the top of the right pane. Bear in mind that a line should run down the center of the surface. If you’re adding a road, your line should connect to another road that’s already mapped in OSM.
  • Click on the point where the center of the new road connects with an existing road. This will create the first node, or point that helps define ways and shapes.
  • Follow the course of the road; where it begins to turn, click to anchor a new node that will allow you to swivel and follow its shape.
  • Press the enter key (or double-click on the final node) to complete your line. You’ll have a burgeoning sense of accomplishment, but you won’t be finished quite yet.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

For this example, I connected the new road where it begins at Karakung Drive, and traced it to its dead end at a parking lot. Your sketch doesn’t have to be perfect, but if you make a mistake, use the undo arrow at the top of the screen. You’ll be an expert at tracing features in no time.

Next, you’ll be prompted to add a feature type for the new road.

  • Set the Feature Type to “Road,” then select a subtype (Residential Road, Motorway, Primary Road, etc.). Click the information icon (i) for a description of each type.
  • If you’re not sure what to choose, set the type to Unknown Road. (If you’re adding a path, choose Path as the feature type, then select the appropriate subtype.)

Then, name and tag the road:

  • Add the name of the road or path. Since the road that goes through the ballpark is unnamed, I left that field empty.
  • By default, roads are assumed to be two-way. If your road is one-way, change the value in the One Way field. Add the speed limit, if known.
  • You can indicate which types of traffic are permitted in the Access section. If you’re not sure, leave this section empty.
  • You can also note the type of surface in the Surface section. Most roads are tagged as paved, which means the surface is sealed with asphalt, paving stone, metal, or other material. If you know the surface is asphalt, you can specify that here. If you’re not sure, tagging more generally as paved or unpaved is fine.
  • If you like, you can include additional fields, such as address, phone, and website with the Add field drop-down menu.
  • Finally, be sure to save your edits with the button at the top right.

Afterwards, OSM will prompt you to write a short summary of your changes in the left pane. For example, you could write something like “Added a minor road and speed limit.”

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

Adding a Park or Building

I added the baseball diamond outline. You may want to add a body of water, grove of trees, your place of work, or a favorite restaurant.

  • Select the Area tool at the top right.
  • Click on a corner or edge of the feature to place the first node.
  • Continue tracing around the feature; you’ll see a polygon taking shape as you go.
  • When you’re finished, press enter to complete the shape.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

OSM offers tools to help you smooth out your tracings. While they won’t help you if you’re tracing a ballpark, they can make outlining buildings and other features a lot easier.

If your square, rectangular, or circular sketch is an “approximate” one that could use a bit of help, complete the drawing, then click on it. A menu of tools will appear on top of your sketch. Click the square-shaped tool (Square Corners) to fix up square and rectangular shapes, or the circle-shaped tool (Make Circular) for circular ones.

Add tags for the new feature in the left pane.

  • I searched for “baseball” in the search box at the top left, then set the feature type for the ballpark to Baseball Diamond.
  • I entered Reilly Field as its name.
  • Since I didn’t know if the park is lit or not (probably not, and I don’t see light poles on the imagery), I kept the value in that field as “unknown.”
  • I also added the address and the website for Haverford Township Little League.
  • Don’t forget to Save your edits, and then summarize them in the left pane.
  • Also, make sure to Tweet or Facebook your changes, and get your friends mapping too.

OpenStreetMap (OSM)

Your Edits Reach Millions

It may take a few minutes (or hours in some cases) before your edits appear on OpenStreetMap.org, and start to percolate out to other maps and services that use OSM data. When you edit the map, your changes will start being pulled by all of these apps and maps used for so many things, used for fun and for research and for work.

Hundreds of millions of people use OpenStreetMap each day. OpenStreetMap data powers some of the best websites and apps out there, including our own Gaia GPS. Here are a few others:

  • Craigslist
  • MapQuest
  • FourSquare
  • Bike Citizens
  • City Maps 2Go
OpenStreetMap (OSM)

The newly added features, as they appear to OSM users.

Become an OSM Expert

There are several resources to help you get started with OSM. Learn more at these sites, and happy mapping!

  • Video Tutorials
  • Beginner’s Guide – A community-maintained guide for beginners.
  • OpenStreetMap Wiki – Need help with tags? Get detailed keys, descriptions, and documentation here.
  • OpenStreetMap Help – post a question; get an answer.
  • FieldPapers.org – This tool makes collecting data from the field and updating OSM easy. Print off atlas pages in advance, sketch and annotate what you see, then upload the photos of your notes. Open your updated Field Papers file in OSM to start editing, based on your firsthand experience.
  • Track-Making Apps – a list of iOS track-recording apps that can be used to update OSM.
  • Recording GPS Tracks – OSM’s instructions on how to edit the map by uploading GPS traces.
August 24, 2015
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
New FeaturesNew Maps

New Map Sources Added to GaiaCloud Site

by Savannah July 1, 2013
written by Savannah

Anting, our new summer intern, has been very busy lately sprucing up the GaiaCloud website.  Anting added new map layers to the GaiaCloud preview screen so you can now view your tracks and waypoints on Mapbox OpenStreetMap, Mapbox Satellite, OpenCycleMap, and USGS Topo maps!

GaiaCloud’s log out was also a bit unreliable before, and now it works perfectly. Thanks Anting!  There will be more improvements rolling out soon, so keep a watch out and let us know what you think of the GaiaCloud website.

opencyclemapgaiacloud satellitegaiacloud USGSgaiacloud

July 1, 2013
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Gaia GPS

MyTopo Map Server in Gaia Currently Down

by Staff Reports May 30, 2011
written by Staff Reports

We wanted to let everyone know that the MyTopo maps in your Gaia app might not be working well today. Amazon made Gaia GPS for Android “free app of the day,” and this hit the server pretty hard.

Please switch to a different map source via Settings, for now, and the topo source should be back to normal by tomorrow.

We made note in the wiki manuals as well.

May 30, 2011
0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinRedditEmail
Load More Posts

Categories

  • Adventures
  • Android
  • App Comparisons
  • App Updates
  • Backcountry Skiing
  • Boating
  • Company News
  • Emergency Response
  • Featured
  • Fishing
  • Gaia GPS
  • Gaia GPS Offroad Podcast
  • GaiaCloud
  • Hikes
  • How-To
  • Hunting
  • iOS
  • New Features
  • New Maps
  • Newsletter
  • Offroading
  • Out and Back Podcast
  • User Profiles

Recent Posts

  • The Hike Map That Broke Me: How Gaia GPS Turned an Overlander Into a Reluctant Hiker
  • A Fond Farewell to National Geographic Maps — And a Look at What’s Ahead
  • Introducing the Gaia Hike Map
  • Download the app and get a free 14-day trial of Gaia GPS Premium
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Youtube
    • RSS
    • Explore The Map
    • Get the App
    • Upgrade Today
    • Explore The Map Catalog
    • New Features
      • Gaia GPS

        The Hike Map That Broke Me: How Gaia…

        April 24, 2025

        Gaia GPS

        Introducing the Gaia Hike Map

        March 18, 2025

        Gaia GPS

        Unlock a New Level of Personalization in Gaia…

        December 12, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        Goodbye Clutter, Hello Streamlined Maps: Introducing Sync to…

        November 26, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

        August 15, 2024

        Gaia GPS

        2023 Mapped: Our Best New Features of the…

        December 27, 2023

        Gaia GPS

        Discover Adventure Easier Than Ever with New Map…

        July 27, 2023

      • New Maps
        • Gaia GPS

          Discover Prime Stargazing Locations with Our New Light…

          August 15, 2024

          Gaia GPS

          Find Prime Viewing for Total Solar Eclipse with…

          March 27, 2024

          Gaia GPS

          See the World More Clearly with New Gaia…

          May 18, 2023

          Gaia GPS

          Gaia Classic: The Only Map You’ll Ever Need?

          May 4, 2023

          Gaia GPS

          Why NatGeo Trails Illustrated are America’s Favorite Maps

          February 9, 2023

          Backcountry Skiing

          Find Backcountry Skiing in Gaia Winter Map

          January 11, 2023

          Gaia GPS

          Our Favorite New Maps and Features

          December 23, 2022

    • Activities
      • Backcountry Skiing
      • Boating
      • Emergency Response
      • Fishing
      • Offroading
    • Adventures
      • User Stories
    • Help

    @2024 - All Right Reserved. Gaia GPS


    Back To Top