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Oxfordshire Tech Firm Launches Data Package For Property



Geospatial data and managed services provider ODCGIS has launched an analysis data package to help the UK’s property professionals manage housing and land assets.


Asset, sustainability, environmental and risk managers, plus surveyors, developers and landowners, are among those set to benefit from ODCGIS Property Insights.


The Bampton, Oxfordshire, firm has built the system in partnership with industry experts in property and land data, designing it as a single combined and analysed output readily accessible through spreadsheet or GIS data formats.


ODCGIS Property Insights combines the most accurate and up-to-date national base datasets with ODCGIS analytics.


The aim is to equip users, who need no GIS knowledge or skills, with a simple way to analyse the condition and spatial context of assets, make decisions on repairs, maintenance and investments, assess flood, subsidence, radon and other insurance risks and optimise contractor management.


Craig Godwin, ODCGIS Managing Director, said:


“By its very nature the land and property market is a key area of data activity. However, sourcing the most appropriate data is no longer the main issue for most users. The challenge is how to analyse it effectively - in other words, how to turn data into useful intelligence. That’s exactly what ODCGIS Property Insights enables."


“By hosting, processing and contextualising essential datasets and combining them with analysis through ODCGIS Property Insights, we can help customers embed location intelligence in their business information."

“This means they can make more informed and operationally sound decisions on all kinds of property-related costs, investment potential, risk management and strategic planning. ODCGIS Property Insights is for any professional involved in property management.”

Users can:

  • fill data gaps with Ordnance Survey NGD data such as building heights, number of floors, construction type, build year, roof type, solar presence, basement presence

  • evaluate the risk of flooding with Twinn by Haskoning climate data

  • assess the risk of trees affecting properties with Bluesky National Tree Map data

  • analyse biodiversity, and heat, wildfire and drought risks, with data from Map Impact

  • understand ownership responsibilities through Land Registry ownership data

  • assess radon risk using BGS (British Geological Survey) radon data

  • analyse open data added such as indices of multiple deprivation ranks, boundary information, subsistence risk, coal mining areas, conservation areas, proximity to fire stations and hospitals, gas and water lines


Rick Thompson, Director of Operations at ODCGIS, said:


“We know from years of experience that customers truly value data but, equally, they often need help to unlock it and ensure it is easily accessible. A key consideration in developing and trialling ODCGIS Property Insights was that the solution should be as easy to use as possible by people without prior specialist knowledge of how to source or manipulate digital map data on screen."


“All the data sources and analysis are combined into one output, one product, for the client, so they don’t have to do any legwork. From the user perspective, the granular analysis it enables will help fill gaps in asset management data showing, for example, that a particular property is mid-terrace as opposed to end-terrace."

“The level of detail you can analyse seamlessly is totally scalable, from the outlines of buildings and green spaces to the risk of flood, subsidence or radon, and how EPC ratings will feed into environmental reports.”

ODCGIS Property Insights is the latest enhancement to the ODCGIS solutions portfolio which provides access to digital geographic content through managed services, data capture and provision and GIS consultancy.


Customers, partners, integrators and suppliers use ODCGIS to source mapping, aerial photography, addressing, height data, historical maps and environmental reports.


*ODCGIS Property Insights is a key theme of ODCGIS’s presence at the forthcoming Housing Innovation Show, taking place at the ICC Birmingham on 4 and 5 February 2026. As well as exhibiting the solution on stand 32, ODCGIS Director of Operations Rick Thompson will discuss its benefits for asset management and analysis in a conference presentation.


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  • Writer: Sophie Andrews - Editorial Assistant
    Sophie Andrews - Editorial Assistant
  • Feb 26, 2025
  • 3 min read

The CLA has challenged the government to launch its rural crime strategy, as new figures reveal how rural communities are being buried under mountains of fly-tipping.


The latest statistics, released today, reveal councils dealt with 1.15 million fly-tipping incidents in 2023/2024, though these figures only account for waste illegally dumped on public land that has been reported to the authorities.


Many fly-tipping incidents occur on privately-owned land, painting an even more damaging picture of the financial burden and environmental impact fly-tipping brings.


It comes as a new snapshot survey of CLA members found that 90% of respondents had been victims of fly-tipping in the last 12 months, with waste such as tyres, cannabis farm vegetation, nitrous oxide canisters, cooking oil drums, mattresses, fridges and sofas dumped on their land.


Almost 40% had experienced at least six separate incidents in the past year, and more than 75% said fly-tipping has a significant financial impact on their business. More than nine in 10 believe local authorities need increased resourcing to help fight the war on waste.


Nearly 12 months ago, before the general election, Labour pledged to establish a rural crime strategy, but it remains unpublished.


Country Land and Business Association President Victoria Vyvyan said: “Rural communities have had enough of fly-tipping and waste crime, and the government must act. Farmers and the countryside are increasingly being targeted by organised crime gangs – often violent – who know that rural areas are under-policed and so they target them. The long-promised rural crime strategy needs to be published as soon as possible."


“It’s not just litter blotting the landscape, but tonnes of household and commercial waste which can often be hazardous – even including asbestos and chemicals – endangering farmers, wildlife, livestock, crops and the environment."

“As Labour itself has pointed out, the crime rate in rural areas has surged by 32 per cent since 2011, faster than in urban areas. People, communities and businesses deserve to feel safe and protected, and the first place to start must surely be ending the chronic under-funding of rural police forces."


Last year the CLA lodged FOI requests that revealed many rural areas in England and Wales have no dedicated rural officers, ringfenced police funding, or forces with basic kit such as torches.


The CLA approached 36 police forces operating in rural areas, and found five have no rural crime team, and eight have less than ten dedicated rural officers.


CLA members speak out:


Colin Rayner, whose family farm in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Surrey, said: “The Rayner family farms have incidents of fly-tipping every day, from a bag of garden waste to lorry loads of waste."


“We have made our farms into medieval forts to try to reduce large loads of waste been tipped on the farms. The cost to the family in terms of extra security, clearing up the waste and threats from the fly-tipping gangs is too much to bear at times.”


John Giffard, of the Chillington Estate, Staffordshire, said: "Fly-tipping is a recurring issue across Chillington, creating a significant financial strain on both the estate and the council, as well as wasting valuable time and resources."


“Our frustration is heightened by the lack of action from public bodies, especially when we’ve identified the source of the problem."

“The good news is that the local police force has established new rural policing teams in the county’s most remote areas, and we’re encouraged to see that tackling fly-tipping is now a top priority for them."


“Thanks to the continued support of the Country Land and Business Association, Chillington is now collaborating with public bodies to initiate prosecutions against those responsible."


David Bliss, CEO of Lowther Estates in Cumbria, said: “We usually experience five or six fly-tipping incidents per year, which, aside from being an annoyance, is costly to clear up."


“Ministers should look urgently at increasing the penalties for convicted fly-tippers and properly resource rural police forces to ensure they are held to account. Without more progress, landowners, not the criminals, will continue to pay the price.”

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