Introduction
In collaboration with the Treasurer/Tax Collector we are making a restful street address geocoding service available. This page describes this service. We are trying to follow the OGC standard which is described here.
The Service
Here is the DEV URL with an example address of "100 Main St":
This validation uses the street segment network only.
These data are carefully maintained by Dept of Public works.
This service does not validate against the EAS addresses.
This returns JSON like so:
{ "inputAddressString": "100 Main St", "inputZipCodeString": "94131", "spatialReference": { "wkid": 4326 }, "foundMatch": true, "foundEasMatch": false, "candidates": [ { "address": "100 MAIN ST", "location": "POINT (-122.3948959209805700 37.7917552676099080)", "score": null, "attributes": { "StreetName": "MAIN", "StreetType": "ST" }, "addressNumber": "100", "street": { "streetNamePrimary": { "base_street_name": "MAIN", "street_type": "ST" }, "streetNameAliases": [], "l_f_add": 101, "l_t_add": 199, "r_f_add": 100, "r_t_add": 198, "seg_cnn": 8628000, "geometry": "MULTILINESTRING ((-122.3949402377882200 37.7918420903234780, -122.3934079394635700 37.7906126704266400))" }, "zipCode": "94105", "jurisdiction": "SF MAIN" } ], "validations": [ [ "WARNING", "your zip code appears be inconsistent with the USPS map" ] ], "didYouMean": [] }
We strongly prefer JSON but we can produce XML if you buy us a beer.
We have tested the DEV implementation against a random sample of 1% of the Treasurers data and the success rate is about 95%.
You can see the unit tests here.
We get parse failures on addresses like this one: PMB 169 3701 SACRAMENTO ST
In the next iteration I am planing on including geocoding and zip code look up.
Examples
Below are several validation links.
These work fine:
1501 HOWARD ST
1560 DAVIDSON AVE
331 CORTLAND AVE
2000 FILLMORE ST
1017 DIVISADERO ST
1618 UNION ST
2250 PINE ST
559 PACIFIC AVE
157 NOE ST
You can send data with no street suffix...
but only if the suffix not needed for disambiguation:
We can't parse everything:
but we do have future plans for alaises.
We support the didYouMean idiom:
Reading JSON
The JSON is formatted for readability but your browser may obscure that.
The way to see the nicely formated JSON is to right click on the web page and select "view source".
The Chrome browser has a nice feature here: (You need to copy and paste the text below to the Chrome address bar and hit enter.)
view-source:http://10.250.60.189/validate/streetAddress/1560%20DAVIDSON%20AVE/
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