Nearly 2 years ago here at LBi, we started working with Multimap to redesign their public .com web property.
It was time for their loved, but ageing raster-map offering to be dragged inline with, then new and innovative, Google’s ’slippy’ Maps.
With a raft of new features including drag, zoom, pan, hybrid view,all stuff we take for granted now, we set about defining a sharpened mapping proposition that worked for both Multimap users and advertisers.
It was a brilliant project, great fun, hard work and really quite challenging. The guys at Multimap (which sold to Microsoft in December last year) were all smart cookies and pleasure to work with. Personally I see it as one of the triumphs of the team I work in here at LBi. Not only was it great solution, it was a great learning experience and those two things make for great projects. Certainly satisfactory ones.
Stephen Barber was, and still is, ace on this project. Will Bloor was his usual unremitting creative self, Peter Jupp smashed the design and Mike McIntyre and Gavin Edwards aced some complex interaction and James Norton provided some wonderful interface development. It was also a pleasure to see Lorenzo in action, which doesn’t happen nearly enough for some of us here at LBi.
Well, enough spouting from me. Multimap.com has just been named as an Honoree in the Service category at this years Webby awards.
This is no mean feat as only the best 15% of submissions attain the accolade and this from a pot of nearly 10,000 entries received from all 50 US states and over 60 countries.
Multimap is now owned by Microsoft, so expect to start using it a lot more as it integrates into all their properties. Exciting stuff indeed.
The guys I worked with on this project were:
- Stephen Barber
- Will Bloor
- Peter Jupp
- Mike Mcintyre
- Dave Dunlop
- Lorenzo Wood
- Darren Gerry
- Gavin Edwards
- Phil WHitehouse
- James Norton
- Marcus Alexander
- Suzanne Chapman
- Claire Freund






x-posted: http://frankandpat.wordpress.com/2008/04/09/multimapcom-honored-at-the-webbys/
no mean feat indeed: tip o’ the old hat from the netherlands…