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Look at this: https://www.bergwelten.com/map/3d/t/w/22579 ..... wow!

Created by https://www.procedural.eu

Found in the source of the first URL: https://foundation.zurb.com/

Which tools do I need to create such a map myself ? Do you know how to ? Thx in advance for your reply.

asked 07 Nov '18, 11:37

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osmwichtel
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edited 07 Nov '18, 11:40

1

Zurb Foundation is a HTML/CSS UI framework and is not about maps.

(10 Nov '18, 11:59) ikonor

ikonor and mboeringa, thx for your useful informations. Josef (osmwichtel)

(13 Nov '18, 22:41) osmwichtel

Hello ikonor and mboeringa,

thank you very much for your help. After a long time, I am busy with maps again. I decided to try Cesium. A result is here: https://2016-09-15-obere-firstalm.glitch.me/ Move the blue "time pointer" at the bottom. In one of the symbols in the corner r/h top, you can select OSM.

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answered 24 Jan '19, 16:38

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osmwichtel
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By the way, there is also the very nice 3D rendering of Swiss Topo, live from their website, that you may already know:

https://map.geo.admin.ch

alt text

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answered 07 Nov '18, 22:29

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mboeringa
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edited 07 Nov '18, 22:30

2

The Swiss Topo 3D view is made with CesiumJS, see https://cesiumjs.org/demos/Swisstopo/

(10 Nov '18, 11:58) ikonor

It seems this is a proprietary product by Procedural, built on top of three.js, and not freely available. It was first introduced as piste.io (has errors) a few years ago, e.g. see slides.

I think what makes it look special is that everything is actually rendered in 3D, especially procedurally generated terrain surface like snow and rock, that looks nice and sharp (but might not match reality). I'm not aware of any other web mapping library that does this.

Usually raster tiles made for 2D (like aerial imagery) are overlaid over terrain and therefore look blurry and distorted on mountains because they are stretched on steep slopes.

One 3D alternative might be CesiumJS, using aerial imagery. It can overlay tracks and render 3D building and tree objects (Swiss Topo example, see also mboeringa's answer), but I have not seen examples with more rendered map features like streets and water yet.

Comparison of the same view:

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answered 10 Nov '18, 11:57

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ikonor
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If your main interest is just to explore the world in 3D, overlay the OpenStreetMap webservice on a 3D globe, and to be able to add your own datasets (e.g. KML, shapefile and some other data sources), then ArcGIS Earth should get you a long way:

https://www.esri.com/en-us/arcgis/products/arcgis-earth

https://www.esri.com/arcgis-blog/products/arcgis-earth/3d-gis/introducing-arcgis-earth-v1-8-powerful-interactive-3d-analysis-for-everyone/

This is a desktop solution though, so you can't create webservices. It is also Windows only. But it does a lot more than Google Earth ever did, especially in terms of the ease of adding custom data and a wealth of ArcGIS Online available data (e.g. scientific and statistical layers) provided by the GIS communities, although for some of these layers, you will need an ArcGIS Online account with ESRI to access them, while others seem accessible as is.

The download button is a bit inconspicuous at the entire bottom of the first mentioned page.

alt text

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answered 07 Nov '18, 22:16

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mboeringa
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question asked: 07 Nov '18, 11:37

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last updated: 24 Jan '19, 16:38

NOTICE: help.openstreetmap.org is no longer in use from 1st March 2024. Please use the OpenStreetMap Community Forum