Urban Mapping, a San Francisco based company founded in 2001, may have developed the next generation of maps. At least, they’ve made some maps that look cool and fold up nicely, which is enough for me. Each map consists of a layered plastic material, which comes together to form three (or more) maps in one. Each map appears depending on the angle that you view the sheet – it looks a lot like those toys you used to find in Cracker Jack Boxes, and uses the same (albeit improved) printing technique.

Urban Mapping actually released similar maps years ago, but the idea never took hold and the company wound up going bankrupt. It then switched gears and now licenses extensive mapping data related to neighborhoods and transit to big players like Yahoo, along with a number of smaller companies. Now that he’s got a sustainable company, founder Ian White is giving the dynamic maps another shot.
Bron: www.panamap.com
Bron: www.urbanmapping.com
Bron: www.techcrunch.com