We had found a database on the web with coordinates, object descriptions (type of object. whether its a church or a house etc.), city name. We also had a link to all good object descriptions in the list (from 1 line to 200 lines of text per object). In the beginning we mainly focused on manualy translating these descriptions into short one or few word descriptions. In this process we also added links to the allready existing articles, and we added the allready existing pictures. There are 60.000 objects in the Netherlands 5.000-7.000 allready had a picture or article. A huge part (30.000+) are just regular "grachtenpanden" (homes), not all that special, and not much information about those. In the past 2 years, since I project started we've made over 20.000 pictures of monuments, currently 47% has a picture, description is there for 90%. Articles only for 10-20% I believe, but not all objects are suitable for an own article, so this will just go slowly with the list and take pretty much years. Currently most of the special buildings: churches, stations, castles, bridges are getting an article, must of the regular houses don't have an article yet. The addresses from all monuments we got 1 year ago from the RCE before the WLM 2010. We have statistics about all our list (see bottem of this e-mail) this has proven very usefull, this way people got motivated to make parts of the monumentslist 100% complete. Statistics have proven a good motivator. Another important thing I would like to point out here for the WLM-competition in your country is the use of Flickr (or comparable sites), last year we've used Flickr as an allternative place to upload pictures. This was mainly for 2 reasons: 1: in 2009 we had Wiki loves art which was 100% on Flickr, 2. Many people have allready a big set of pictures on Flickr, allowing upload on flickr means they only have to add an identifier (monumentnumber) and switch the license. We've got over 2000 from the pictures througt Flickr. This means 10-15% of the pictures (from which we would've missed a big part if we hadn't allowed the use of Flickr. We had a little bot which took all pictures from Flickr to commons, and we hand approved them before they could end up in the Flickr Pool (checking own work, license and identifier). Mvg, Bas
About the statistics:
On http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiproject/Erfgoed/Nederlandse_Erfgo... (look at the bottem) you can find statistics about all our list, and the overview is at the bottem. Provincie=departmentRecords=number of monumentsobjectnaam=object namebouwjaar=building yearadres=adressgps=coordinatesfoto=picturearchitect=architect (most of the buildings dont have an architect)
Date: Sat, 30 Jul 2011 15:01:59 +0200 From: lars@aronsson.se To: wikilovesmonuments@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Wiki Loves Monuments] Coordinates
On 07/30/2011 10:29 AM, Lodewijk wrote:
In the Netherlands we had the luck that the RCE provided all the coordinates - that means that we have roughly a coverage of 100%.
Once you had a list of coordinates, and, -- what? Object names? Place names? Descriptions of each object? How did you match these to existing articles? Did you create stub articles for the non-existing ones?
-- Lars Aronsson (lars@aronsson.se) Aronsson Datateknik - http://aronsson.se
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