Geodesy
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Fundamentals
Geodesy · Geodynamics
Geomatics · Cartography
Concepts
Datum · Distance · Geoid
Figure of the Earth
Geodetic system
Geog. coord. system
Hor. pos. representation
Map projection
Reference ellipsoid
Satellite geodesy
Spatial reference system
Technologies
GNSS · GPS · GLONASS
Standards
ED50 · ETRS89 · GRS 80
NAD83 · NAVD88 · SAD69
SRID · UTM · WGS84
History
History of geodesy
NAVD29
ITM coordinates on an OSI map from 2006. In this example the easting and the northing are separated by a comma.
File:ITM map of Ireland.svg
An illustration of ITM coordinates over a map of Ireland. Eastings are on the top/bottom. Northings are on the right/left.

Irish Transverse Mercator (ITM), is the geographic coordinate system for Ireland. It was implemented jointly by the Ordnance Survey Ireland (OSI) and the Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland (OSNI) in 2001. The name is derived from the Transverse Mercator projection it uses and the fact that it is optimized for the island of Ireland.

History

The older Irish grid reference system required GPS measurements to be “translated” (using coordinate transformations). The more precise the GPS measurements were, the more the translation process introduced inaccuracies.

While the existing UTM coordinate system partly fulfilled the requirement for direct GPS compatibility it had some drawbacks, including varying levels of distortion across the island due to the central meridian being at the west coast of Ireland.

The new system needed to satisfy various criteria: GPS compatibility, map distortion for the whole island of Ireland had to be minimal, it was to be conformal and backward compatible with existing mapping. A customized Transverse Mercator projection was chosen.

ITM and the older more established Irish Grid will (initially at least) be used in parallel. As a result ITM coordinates had to be obviously different so users would not confuse the two. This was done by shifting the ITM false origin further into the Atlantic and thereby creating substantially different coordinate numbers for any given location.

While OSI and OSNI intend to supply map information in the older Irish Grid format into the future, the Irish Institution of Surveyors has recommended that ITM be adopted as soon as possible as the preferred official coordinate system for Ireland.

Examples

An ITM coordinate is generally given as a pair of two six-digit numbers (excluding any digits behind a decimal point which may be used in very precise surveying). The first number is always the easting and the second is the northing. The easting and northing are in meters from the false origin.

The ITM coordinate for the Spire of Dublin on O'Connell Street is:

715830, 734697

The first figure is the easting and means that the location is 715,830 metres east from the false origin (along the X axis). The second figure is the northing and puts the location 734,697 metres north of the false origin (along the Y axis)

The equivalent Irish Grid coordinate for the same location is:

315904, 234671

The Spire of Dublin example provides a fix for a location that is accurate to 1 metre. With ITM it is possible to give a more accurate coordinate for a given location by using a decimal point after the initial six figure easting and northing.

The ITM coordinate for the passive GPS station at the OSI office is:

E 709885.081m, N 736167.699m

This ITM coordinate has three digits behind the decimal point which gives a fix for a location with millimetre accuracy. Also notice how the easting in this example is indicated with an “E” and likewise an “N” for the northing. The fact that the coordinate is in meters is indicated by the lowercase m.

With ITM there is no provision for using myriad letters and truncated coordinates as there is with the Irish Grid. Every coordinate must be given with at least a six digit easting and northing from the false origin.

Comparison of ITM, Irish Grid and UTM

ITM Irish Grid UTM
Reference Ellipsoid: GRS80 Airy Modified GRS80
Central Meridian: 8° West 8° West 9° West
Scale on Central Meridian: 0.999 820 1.000 035 0.999 600
True Origin: 53° 30’ North; 8° West 53° 30’ North; 8° West 0° 00’ North; 9° West
False Origin: 600,000m West; 750,000m South 200,000m West; 250,000m South 500,000m West; 0m South
Vertical Datum: Malin Head Malin Head  ?
EPSG Code: 2157 29902 32629

See also

References

External links

Online Converters

  • OSI Coordinate Converter Allows conversion between Irish Grid, ITM, UTM & ETRF89.(If registration is required enter: ie@ie.ie for the email address and password for the password.)
  • www.fieldenmaps.info Detailed converter: ITM,UTM, Irish Grid, War Office Irish Grid, Bonne Projection, Decimal/Deg. Min. Sec. Lat. Long. with multiple datums.
  • Ordnance Survey (UK) Coordinate Converter. Click on the ITM button to toggle between Irish Grid and ITM.