Great graphics but they don't even begin to convey the sheer complexity of what happens underneath the pavement. For starters, there is rather a lot of archaeology missing.
Any reasonably old town or city is built on the strata of its past. Terry Pratchett spelt it out in several of his books rather better than I can, so feel free to investigate that.
That said, I defy anyone not to be a bit beguiled by the pictures in the OP.
Love this idea. Recently visited a couple of cities with very different under and overground infrastructure and being able to see this would be really cool
Another page showing a lot of stations done in this way was shared before on HN. I remember they were like art, not misstanding any wall in your house. Can't find the HN post anymore. Maybe somebody else remembers.
I can only find http://stations.aeracode.org/ still with the search which shows the stations in an interactive 3D map showing tubes and pathways.
On a side note, this site has the best EU cookies popup I've seen:
> Annoying message about cookies:
> Like 90% of websites, we use cookies to help us improve the site, and to help you click around. These are small files that are stored on your computer. EU regulations mean we have to point this out, hence the annoying pop-up, which will only appear on this visit. Happy to continue? [More info]
Would be better if they weren't straight-up lying. Without DNT and uBlock (i.e. the settings of an average user) that page results in more than a hundred cookies and hundreds of requests to more than a hundred third parties. A great deal of those are certainly not about improving the site or helping people click around.
Considering that they're making a specific claim about their usage and then using the access you provide to gain additional data in excess of what you approve, does this constitute hacking (and hence cybercrime)?
At first blush, this seems indistinguishable from social engineering installation of an application that steals data -- massively done against thousands to millions of victims. I suppose that would make this website one of the larger hacking groups in the world.
These are really cool - I wonder how the artists actually managed to do these - did they get official maps? I wonder if there are any exposing the many layers of stations inaccessible to the public, as described here:
There's also an app, Stationmaster, which comes with 3D maps of all underground stations in London. Not much artistic quality though: http://www.stationmasterapp.com
Anyone else getting this page trying to load an app on iOS. Completely unreadable as it bumps me off the page. I wonder if there is some dodgy ad served on there.
16 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 36.1 ms ] threadAny reasonably old town or city is built on the strata of its past. Terry Pratchett spelt it out in several of his books rather better than I can, so feel free to investigate that.
That said, I defy anyone not to be a bit beguiled by the pictures in the OP.
As comment in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1496485.
----
Another page showing a lot of stations done in this way was shared before on HN. I remember they were like art, not misstanding any wall in your house. Can't find the HN post anymore. Maybe somebody else remembers.
I can only find http://stations.aeracode.org/ still with the search which shows the stations in an interactive 3D map showing tubes and pathways.
Found some more: https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/blog/2015/07/12/3d-maps-of-every...
http://www.projectsubwaynyc.com/x-ray-area-maps/
http://weburbanist.com/2015/09/26/wayfinding-in-subways-3d-b...
But still not the original HN article.
> Annoying message about cookies:
> Like 90% of websites, we use cookies to help us improve the site, and to help you click around. These are small files that are stored on your computer. EU regulations mean we have to point this out, hence the annoying pop-up, which will only appear on this visit. Happy to continue? [More info]
At first blush, this seems indistinguishable from social engineering installation of an application that steals data -- massively done against thousands to millions of victims. I suppose that would make this website one of the larger hacking groups in the world.
http://www.michalpaszkiewicz.co.uk/blog/tflhiddendungeons/in...
Bastinjn beat me to this (and got my upvote of course): https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/blog/2015/07/12/3d-maps-of-every...
My favorite one is Bank/Monument.. such a maze!! pick the "wrong" exit and you may walk an extra 15mins for no reason!