Historic imagery website clicks into place
Media Release
Historic imagery website clicks into place
Has the street where you live changed over the years? Perhaps it’s gone from just having a few houses to having lots. Or maybe it didn’t even exist 50 years ago!
Now there’s a fun and easy way to find out. A new website shows how much the Bay of Plenty region has changed over the years through aerial photography.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council and key partners Waikato Regional Council, Environment Canterbury and Hawkes Bay Regional Council have worked together to create a new website called Retrolens (http://retrolens.nz) – which provides free access to hundreds of thousands of aerial photographs taken from the 1930s to the mid-2000s.
Regional Council’s Geospatial Team Leader Glen Clarkin said Retrolens was a great project for the regional council to be part of, as it means the public can easily access some of the photos it holds, which would otherwise sit on a shelf and gather dust.
“By collaborating with the other Councils we’ve been able to create a great public resource that would have been otherwise unaffordable had each Council tried to do it on their own,” Mr Clarkin said.
“Historic aerial imagery is incredibly important for a variety of reasons, including showing changes in land use, identifying where dangerous chemicals may have been used, showing coastline changes, and archaeology and cultural research.
“It’s also a fun tool for people to use to see what the land around them looked like decades ago, and visitors to the site can download a copy of the image for their own use.”
Bay of Plenty residents interested in seeing other useful information presented on maps or in a geospatial format can also visit http://maps.boprc.govt.nz. Marae locations, mooring areas, soil information and bus routes can all be viewed on the Regional Council’s Maps site.
The images on RetroLens are sourced from a parallel project which is digitising the Crown’s archive of historic aerial photos to preserve them. The funding partners for the national digitisation project with LINZ (Land Information New Zealand) are: Auckland Council, Bay of Plenty Local Authority Shared Services, Environment Canterbury, Hawkes Bay Regional Council, Environment Southland, Tasman District Council and Waikato Local Authority Shared Services.