I wonder if anyone knows of projects that link building histories with OSM.

A friend recently told me he’d done a fair bit of research into his house in 
Bristol, built around 1670. I wanted to recommend an OSM-related project that 
he could contribute to, but was sad I could not.

A fine example of what I am talking about is Julie Myerson’s “Home: The Story 
of Everyone Who Ever Lived in Our House”, published 2004.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Home-Story-Everyone-Lived-House/dp/0007148224

The address is 34 Lillieshall Road in Clapham. If the houses were in OSM 
already I’d be tempted to add building:history=<that URL>

To be clear, I’m talking about stories (and maybe also photos and plans). This 
is not about structured data.

Of course most of this social, urban history research about individual 
buildings is done by amateurs, unpublished, and probably dies with the 
researcher. Even if not, it’s likely very inaccessible. Some is published by 
local history societies. I would love to capture it all and prevent it being 
lost, so that others can use it and add to it. Whether it is published under 
copyright or under an open license, it would still be great to aggregate the 
info.

A reasonable tag from OSM might be building:history=<url>. This works for 
Amazon links; but personal websites, which one might like to link to, die too. 
I’m not sure what the best methods might be. Many buildings whose history one 
might like to record are no longer standing, of course. And there might be 
conflicting accounts from various competing sources, e.g. in Cyprus or Israel.

Maybe I’m overplaying a potential OSM angle, since the way people tell stories 
about buildings is not tightly related to entities in OSM. They will talk about 
the development of a whole row of buildings, stray into the social history of 
the whole area, etc. Wikipedia does well for famous buildings – but it wouldn’t 
accept histories of arbitrary buildings, and it’s not famous buildings whose 
histories are being lost. Yet maybe Wikia, with latlongs, would be a good home 
for this kind of project.

Any thoughts?

Some links on researching ones house appended below.

- Laurence


http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/jun/21/how-research-history-your-home-nick-barratt
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/records/looking-for-place/houses.htm
https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/your-home/your-homes-history/
http://www.ipl.org/div/pf/entry/76687


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