Ghana to adopt UK technology for street naming

Housing_PopulationGhana is expected to adopt the technological mechanism of Intelligent Addressing (IA) of the United Kingdom as the cardinal structure in the street naming and property addressing system.

Mr Tony Black, an IA Consultant who participated in a recent workshop in Accra told the Ghana News Agency in an interview at the weekend, that a national address gazetteer would be built alongside the street naming project.

He said IA employ’s the technique of Unique Property Reference Number (UPRN) and the Unique Street Reference Number (USRN) which would transform national security and other service providers’ ability to respond rapidly to distress calls.

Mr Black, who is IA Operations Director, explained that Ghana stands to benefit tremendously from the technology of the property addressing system as it would improve the quality of location information relating to the delivery of services and protection of life and property.

He said IA would establish a spatial information management through National Land and Property Gazetteer (NLPG) and the National Street Gazetteer (NSG).

He said both the NLPG and NSG would create a new standard of currency and completeness for location data as the definitive list of addresses in the country.

He said the NLPG is arguably the most successful initiative of its kind and size in the world and has won European recognition for its implementation.

Mr Black said Ghana stands to benefit from Intelligent Addressing’s consultants who were instrumental in the development of the national address gazetteer for England and Wales, which is now managed by a public sector partnership, GeoPlace.

Dr Emmanuel Boakye-Danquah, IA Consultant and Project Director, said Ghana should therefore adopt a holistic approach to the street naming and property addressing project by incorporating a wider access to definitive addressing.

On the challenge of data collection based on the haphazard way of buildings in some parts of the country, he said IA has the technical background to use information communication and technology system to collate data on every household in the country.

President John Dramani Mahama in March this year directed the Minister for Local Government and Rural Development at the launch of the National Urban Policy Framework and Action Plan to implement the street naming within 18 months.

President Mahama, then Vice President, in August 2012, also launched the National Policy document and operational guidelines on street naming and property addressing system for Ghana.

The Document was designed by the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development in collaboration with the German International Cooperation, United States Agency for International Development, World Bank, European Union among other partners.

It would among other things provide Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies with the policy framework of implementing the street naming and property addressing system, help improve the quality of life in communities and business environment.

The street naming and property addressing system would also facilitate the delivery of services especially mail delivery and location for disasters such as fire outbreaks and flooding.

Intelligent Addressing is a United Kingdom based information management specialist and data provider, focusing on land and property data, particularly addresses.

It creates synergy and works in partnership with local government in the development of the NLPG, manages the national datasets for local government; the NLPG and the NSG.

Source: GNA

2 Comments
  1. adrian says

    Yes, this is the kind of development I want to be seeing!

  2. Kessy says

    Why do we Ghanaians like to TALK a lot. Look promise and promise and promise mean nothing to us. Just deliver. If the now President requested this 18 months, why the story of we will, we will. Notice that there was never a mention of when this service will be available for the public to us.

    Everywhere in the world, every project, you are given the exact date, that the project will be completed. In Ghana they just keep tell you we will we will. Translated, they are just fooling the public. May be not. But as long as no one can give you a date, is all a lie. Why do are say that, because a government that plans to deliver a project, should be able to give the exact date and time the project will be completed and ready for use. IF I am wrong, then give us a date. I have hearing all my life that we will have street names, well just again a promise. Please stop it is a shame, for us an educated society to be treated as if we are fools. Stop it.

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