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Addressing just got better with new updates to World Geocoding for ArcGIS

Significant enhancements to the World Geocoding service for the Esri ArcGIS Platform were released July 11 by Esri, the global leader in spatial analytics. The latest version of World Geocoder for ArcGIS is now available in the cloud and for on premises deployments or go to go.esri.com/worldgeocoding for more information.

Esri’s Karen Richardson said “the updates to the World Geocoding service gives users access to 25 additional countries, including Cuba, Bangladesh, and Libya, where street addresses can be located. These new enhancements include improvements such as refined address matching using the latest authoritative datasets, and easier identification of real locations. For the complex problem of intersection matching, the service has been improved to recognize more diverse types of intersections on a visual map showing features that do not physically meet, like overpasses above other roads, or streets that are connected by roundabouts. Coordinates can also be matched to points of interest, postal regions, administrative areas, and countries for enhance reverse coding.”

Likewise, Esri Product Manager Nick Patel said “different regions around the world have many formats and requirements for how people write and address on an envelope or how companies input a customer’s information into their system. For the better part of this decade, we have invested millions of dollars in capturing address formats and rules around the world and build all this into address matching logic. It is important that the geocoding component is accurate, as this directly influences downstream analysis and decisions.”

For those who are new to Esri’s World Geocoding service, it [World Geocoding] allows users to easily convert addresses into locations and vice versa on a map. Presently, hundreds of thousands of organizations around the world use Esri’s World Geocoding capabilities to plot their data on maps. World Geocoding delivers street-level geocoding for over 130 countries, which covers more than 90 percent of the worldwide population. Users can interactively locate addresses on a map – one request at a time – or batch geocode many addresses at once.