Marina Petkova
Hello, I'm Marina !
I contribute to OpenStreetMap both as a volunteer and professionally.
I am based in France, where i co-founded the company Dynartio.
We focus on tooling and data analysis for circular economy and territorial resource flows.
We use OpenStreetMap, both as contributors and as practitioners.
I am member of the FPOSM, and the MapYourGrid initiative.
Sessions
The Fédération des pros d’OpenStreetMap (FPOSM) is the French non‑profit organization that unites companies and professionals whose services and tools are built on OpenStreetMap, and who are committed to keeping OpenStreetMap a healthy digital commons.
Launched during State-of-the-Map France 2023, the FPOSM now gathers 28 French companies with expertise in creating, using, enhancing and ensuring the quality of OSM data on topics such as : mobility, routing and accessibility, infrastructures and power grids, urban planning, food and agriculture, tourism, local business, community outreach and more. Members also develop and maintain software around OpenStreetMap, such as Clearance, Podoma, LeBonTag, GridInspector.
The FPOSM is the worldwide most advanced structured federation of OSM professionals directly coming from and complementary to the volunteer community and local chapters.
We will share how and why FPOSM was created, and how we are committed to preserve OpenStreetMap’s ethos and guidelines.
We will also talk about the FPOSM’s collective work:
- OSM advocacy towards public authorities
- The practical booklet « Everything you need to know about the ODbL licence, available in French and English.
- The guide « OpenStreetMap and Territories », which brings together a wide range of testimonials from French public sector stakeholders who have used OSM across their territories.
- The organization of events like « OpenStreetMap & territoires » that connect professionals and public actors.
We’ll wrap up with what we’ve learned, what challenges we are facing, and some ideas for starting similar groups elsewhere, so professional ecosystems grow alongside and actively support local OSM communities.
As OpenStreetMap becomes more mature and complete, the challenges now lie in ensuring data quality. Mappers may receive customised feedback on their contributions, and data reusers are seeking greater confidence in the information they rely on.
Over the past year, we at MapYourGrid have been working on assessing and improving the quality of power infrastructure data in OpenStreetMap. This work relies on existing quality assurance and monitoring tools, such as Osmose and Podoma, with a quality comparison approach through a new platform, GridInspector.
With this talk, we aim to share with the community how we built a coherent quality assurance strategy. We will present our experience combining multiple tools, and show how automation can support continuous monitoring and business-grade consistency testing.
We will also explore what comes next: moving towards a highly automated quality assessment process for power infrastructure data. This includes leveraging Earth observation data and designing human-in-the-loop validation processes to balance automation with local knowledge and mapper expertise.
While intended with power infrastructure data in mind, the methods we present are designed to be broadly used in many fields. Thus this presentation won’t be dedicated to the power infrastructure topic but only use it as an example. In fact, we would love to discuss with the community how these tools and methods can be replicated to other fields (i.e. assessing data quality for waterways or road and urban infrastructures).
Attendees will leave with practical insights on building a QA strategy, leveraging existing tools more effectively, and designing feedback loops that benefit both contributors and data reusers.