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MapQuest offers online, mobile, business and developer solutions that help people discover and explore where they would like to go, how to get there and what to do along the way and at your destination.
MapQuest (stylized as mapquest) is an American free online web mapping service. It was launched in 1996 as the first commercial web mapping service. [ 1 ] MapQuest's competitors include Apple Maps , Here , and Google Maps .
Wikipedia images of maps of the United Kingdom (1 C) Pages in category "Maps of the United Kingdom" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
OS MasterMap® Integrated Transport Network™ (ITN) Layer maps Great Britain’s road network – from motorways, pedestrian streets, parks, reserves to museums. It contains attributes to enable the routing of vehicles, taking into account the limitations of the road network in general.
London A–Z Street Atlas. Geographers' A–Z Map Company Ltd. is the largest independent map publisher in the United Kingdom, providing cartographic services, [1] digital data products [2] and paper mapping publications [3] (including Street Atlases, Visitors' Guides, Great Britain Road Atlases, and The Adventure Atlas).
Anglesea Street, Great Georges St S, Parliament St / Cork Hill Dawson Street: Sráid Dhásain: 1723 R138: 2 Nassau St, Molesworth St, St Stephen's Green: Great Denmark Street: Sráid na Danmhairge Mhór: 1770 1 Gardiner Place, Gardiner Row Parnell Square, North Great George's Street, Temple Street, Gardiners Row Dorset Street: Sráid Dorset: 1756
A route (or road) number, designation or abbreviation is an identifying numeric (or alphanumeric) designation assigned by a highway authority to a particular stretch of roadway to distinguish it from other routes and, in many cases, also to indicate its classification (e.g. motorway, primary route, regional road, etc.), general geographical location (in zonal numbering systems) and/or ...
Oscar Wilde's house on Tite Street, Chelsea Crosby Hall on Cheyne Walk. Parts of this building date back to the time of Richard III, its first owner. But it is not native to Chelsea – it is a survivor of the Great Fire of London. It was shipped brick by brick from Bishopsgate in 1910 after being threatened with demolition. (January 2006)