AccessDPRK Phase I Release
Three and a half years ago I embarked on the ambitious project of mapping the whole of North Korea; a project called "AccessDPRK". I have always had a fascination with
authoritarian regimes and for some reason my specific interest in North Korea
began to grow a little over three years ago. I also have had a deep love of
maps and geography since I was a very young child.
As my interests piqued, I started using Google Earth
to look at North Korea. What I found were informative “community placemarks”
marking the location of a monument or military site. I looked into who had
created those placemarks, which seemed to cover the entire country, and found
that they were part of a project called “North Korea Uncovered”. Created over
the course of two years (2007-09), by George Mason doctoral candidate Curtis
Melvin and a few volunteers, the project created the most comprehensive map of
the country to-date. It included thousands of placemarks (approx. 9,000) – monuments,
factories, palaces, artillery batteries, ancient tombs, and so much more. There
was also another person, a Google Earth user known only as “Planeman_”, who
created a map of supposedly all the artillery sites in North Korea.
However, as I explored these large files, I quickly
discovered that there were massive holes in the data. While they marked some
locations of each general type of item, the resulting creation was far
from truly comprehensive. For some reason this offended me (in a lighthearted way), and since I am
slightly obsessive and had an inherent interest in the country, I decided to
take it upon myself to make the most comprehensive (at its fullest meaning) map
of North Korea any private citizen has ever made by going and marking all of
the locations not marked in Melvin’s project.
Once completed, I would release the information in the
form of a Google Earth file to the public via my website, blog, and the Google Earth
Forum. The goal being to expose the entirety of country to the world. To show
people not just how the physical infrastructure of the nation is laid out (like
power plants), but to also give a glimpse of daily life by having marketplaces, parks, as well as historical locations lost to Western knowledge, and
much, much more. After the completion of “Phase I”, I also intend to review Curtis
Melvin’s file and make any necessary corrections to it (since it is now six years
old) and combine the two projects into a single “master file”. Little did I
know what this full endeavor would require.
On Nov. 28, 2015, I finished the initial mapping phase
of my project. After three years, over a thousand hours of active mapping work,
and delving into thousands of pages worth of material to assist in creating
this map, I now have seen every square mile of the country – indeed every home.
The resulting Google Earth file is nearly 3 times the size of Melvin’s and
contains 28,164 additional
placemarks.
The file is divided according to each of North Korea’s
primary administrative regions. Each is then further divided into 3 main
categories: Military, Monuments, and Domestic. The Military and Domestic
categories are subdivided into several sub-categories, such has anti-aircraft
artillery sites, military bases, naval sites, and on the domestic side, dams,
electrical substations, schools, factories, etc. All told, there are over 50
subcategories. Beyond those province specific folders, there’s are folders
exclusively dedicated to the Demilitarized Zone, the country’s airports,
historic places, etc.
One reason why this has taken so long is that as I would go around the country, I would find new categories of places that were numerous enough to have a national impact, like irrigation pumping stations and radar sites. So as I would add these new categories, I would have to go back an re-map formerly "completed" areas.
The ultimate end of this project is not yet known.
Like the development of the Internet, I’m not fully aware of the possibilities
that can arise once people start mining the data. You could create a
comprehensive map of North Korea’s electrical grid, you could discover their
current defensive military strategies and find holes in their air defense
system, you could work out how their internal security system is integrated
across various transportation modes, and I’m sure many other things.
In addition to mapping, I’ve also written dozens of posts for this blog as well as 6 Wikipedia articles which have been read a
combined 400,000 times and translated into multiple languages.
My main wish is that this can be used to help the
world see that North Koreans are normal human beings who have been held hostage
by their government. And that this provides some insight into how that
government works to further the work of others in opening up North Korea, and one-day
help bring North Korea into the 21st century with a respect for
freedom.
Phase II is already underway, and I have marked over 5,000 new places thus far. These include public schools, universities, museums, theaters, town halls, and other "buildings of interest". This is going to take some time to complete, but I'm hoping to have everything (including the "master file") finished and ready to be published by the end of the year, if not sooner.
Here are a few specific item counts:
Anti-aircraft artillery batteries: 587 Hardened Artillery Sites: 626 Military bases: 938 Monuments: 6,720 Dams: 1,169 Communication towers: 747 Electrical substations: 736
Factories: 470 Marketplaces: 225 Ancient sites: 112
Factories: 470 Marketplaces: 225 Ancient sites: 112
Get the File!
If you want to discuss the project on social media, please use the hashtag #AccessDPRK either on Twitter or Facebook. I welcome comments and suggestions, as well as new information.
To access the Phase I Google Earth file, you can either visit my file archive here and click the download button for "AccessDPRK Phase I_Finish_V1-March-5-2016.kmz" or download it directly by clicking this link. To view the file you must have Google Earth on your computer/device. NOTE: this is a large file (over 28,000 items). For some computers Google Earth might freeze or crash if you try to have every province open at once. Just go through them one by one if you're unsure.
All Google Earth KMZ files relating to this mapping project are hosted on my Google Site https://sites.google.com/site/mymappingprojects/access-north-korea
All Google Earth KMZ files relating to this mapping project are hosted on my Google Site https://sites.google.com/site/mymappingprojects/access-north-korea
-- Jacob Bogle, 3/5/2016
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