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SEARCH, or Looking for Places

Geocoding is the process of matching an address to its corresponding geographic coordinates. There's nothing inherent in the words "10 Downing Street, London, United Kingdom" that conveys its location at the coordinates [ 51.503396, -0.12764 ]. Instead this process [...].

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The most basic scenario

You just set the text parameter to whatever you want to find.

Let's say you wanted to find Stinky Beach

You would set the following parameters in your query url:

parameter value
text stinky beach
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=stinky beach](https://search.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=stinky beach)

...go ahead, and click that link, we'll wait

Maybe you'd like to find an address

Here's an example:

parameter value
text 30 west 26th street
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=30 west 26th street](https://search.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=30 west 26th street)

Or maybe a landmark, like Yankee Stadium

parameter value
text yankee stadium
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=yankee stadium](https://search.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=yankee stadium)

cApiTaliZAtioN

You may have noticed already that cApiTaliZAtioN isn't a big deal for search. You can type yankee stadium or Yankee Stadium or even YANKEE STADIUM if you're really excited about finding it. See for yourself by comparing the results of the previous search to the following:

parameter value
text YANKEE STADIUM
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=YANKEE STADIUM](https://search.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=YANKEE STADIUM)

Results

Now that you've seen some examples of search, let's examine the results closer. When requesting search results you will always get back GeoJSON results, unless something goes terribly wrong, in which case you'll get a really helpful error.

You can go here to learn more about the GeoJSON data format specification. We'll assume you're familiar with the general layout and only point out some important details here.

You will find the following top-level structure to every response:

{
  "geocoding":{...},
  "type":"FeatureCollection",
  "features":[...],
  "bbox":[...]
}

For the purposes of getting started quickly, let's keep our focus on the features property of the result. This is where you will find the list of results that best matched your input parameters.

Each item in this list will contain all the information needed to identify it in human-readable format in the properties block, as well as computer friendly coordinates in the geometry property. Note the label property, which is a human-friendly representation of the place, ready to be displayed to an end-user.

{  
  "type":"Feature",
  "properties":{  
    "gid":"...",
    "layer":"address",
    "source":"osm",
    "name":"30 West 26th Street",
    "housenumber":"30",
    "street":"West 26th Street",
    "postalcode":"10010",
    "country_a":"USA",
    "country":"United States",
    "region":"New York",
    "region_a":"NY",
    "county":"New York County",
    "localadmin":"Manhattan",
    "locality":"New York",
    "neighbourhood":"Flatiron District",
    "confidence":0.9624939994613662,
    "label":"30 West 26th Street, Manhattan, NY"
  },
  "geometry":{  
    "type":"Point",
    "coordinates":[  
      -73.990342,
      40.744243
    ]
  }
}

There is so much more to tell you about the plethora of data being returned for each search, we had to split it out into its own section. Read more about the response format.

Result count

You may have noticed that there were 10 places in the results for all the previous search examples. That's the default number of results the API will return, unless otherwise specified.

Want a single result?

Just set the size parameter to the desired number:

parameter value
text stinky beach
size 1
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=stinky beach&size=1](https://pelias.bigdev.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=stinky beach&size=1)

How about 25 results?

parameter value
text stinky beach
size 25
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=stinky beach&size=25](https://pelias.bigdev.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=stinky beach&size=25)

All this time you've been searching the entire world...

What if you need results from only a...

Sometimes it's necessary to limit the search to a portion of the world. This can be useful if you're looking for places in a particular region, or country, or only want to look in the immediate viscinity of a user with a known location. Different usecases call for different specifications of this bounding region. We currently support three types: rectangle, circle, and country.

...rectangular region

In the case where you need to specify the boundary using a rectangle, all we need is a pair of coordinates on earth. Here are a few examples:

Let's say you wanted to find museums in London

You'd need to set the boundary.rect.* parameter grouping to indicate the extent of the boundary.

parameter value
text museum
boundary.rect.min_lat 51.286839
boundary.rect.min_lon -0.51035
boundary.rect.max_lat 51.692322
boundary.rect.max_lon 0.33403
api_key get yours here

/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=museum&boundary.rect.min_lat=51.286839&boundary.rect.min_lon=-0.51035&boundary.rect.max_lat=51.692322&boundary.rect.max_lon=0.33403

Below is the region that will be searched. Museums located outside of this highlighted region will NOT be included in the results. The museums returned will be sorted based on how well they matched the text parameter, in this case museum.

Or you wanted to find an address, such as 28 Main Ave, in New York City?
parameter value
text 28 Main Ave
boundary.rect.min_lat 51.286839
boundary.rect.min_lon -74.258904
boundary.rect.max_lat 40.477421
boundary.rect.max_lon -73.700378
api_key get yours here

[/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=28 Main Ave&boundary.rect.min_lat=51.286839&boundary.rect.min_lon=-74.258904&boundary.rect.max_lat=40.477421&boundary.rect.max_lon=-73.700378](http://pelias.bigdev.mapzen.com/v1/search?api_key={YOUR_API_KEY}&text=28 Main Ave&boundary.rect.min_lat=51.286839&boundary.rect.min_lon=-74.258904&boundary.rect.max_lat=40.477421&boundary.rect.max_lon=-73.700378)

...circular region

Sometimes you don't have a rectangle to work with, but you you've got instead a point on earth, for example your location coordinates, and a maximum distance within which acceptable results can be located.

Find all Starbucks locations within a 3km radius of a spot in Madrid

This time, we'll use the boundary.circle.* parameter grouping to get the job done. boundary.circle.lat and boundary.circle.lon should be set to your location in Madrid, while boundary.circle.radius should be set to the acceptable distance from that location. Note that the boundary.circle.radius parameter is always specified in kilometers.

parameter value
text starbucks
boundary.circle.lat 40.414149
boundary.circle.lon -3.703755
boundary.circle.radius 3
api_key get yours here

/v1/search?api_key={YOUR-KEY}&text=starbucks&boundary.circle.lat=40.414149&boundary.circle.lon=-3.703755&boundary.circle.radius=3

...specific country

TBD

Boundaries are mutually exclusive

  • Country (country code)
  • Rectangle (bbox)
  • Circle (point, radius)

All results outside of the area will be discarded.

Focusing Results Near Your End-Users

Mapzen Search can let your users search globally, while providing them with search results for the closest matching places first. All you have to do is provide Mapzen Search with some location context about where the search should be focused.

In many cases, you may have the location of the user's device (either through Device Location APIs or the HTML5 Location API) or the area of a map that the user is looking at (the map viewport).

  • focus viewport api example (e.g. union square)
  • focus point api example (NY union square)

Combining Focused Results with Boundaries

  • Focus within country example

  • Focus within large bounding box example (e.g. maximum distance a user is willing to travel)

Selecting Datasets

Mapzen search offers two types of options for selecting the dataset you want back:

  1. the originating source of the data (sources)
  2. the kind of place you're looking to geocode against (layers)

Selecting Sources

{list sources, not different licenses} {combine source listing, e.g. open addresses + Geonames}

Selecting Layers

Layer Name Represents
venue Points of interest, businesses, things with walls
address Places with a street address
country Places that issue passports, nations, nation-states
region States and provinces
county Official governmental area; usually bigger than a locality, almost always smaller than a region
locality Towns, hamlets, cities, etc.
localadmin
neighbourhood
coarse Alias for simultaneously using country, region, county, locality, localadmin, and neighbourhood

Our layers are derived from the hierarchy created by the gazetteer Who's on First and can be used to facilitate coarse geocoding.

Coarse Geocoding (Neighborhoods, Cities, States, Countries)

There are many cases where you're after not a point, but a general area, whether it's the name of a town, a neighborhood, a county, or a country.

  • Coarse general
  • Select cities
  • Select localities in a country (with boundary.country)

Using Autocomplete & Search Together

For end-user applications, /autocomplete is intended to be used alongside /search to facilitate real-time feedback for user s