I have the longitude and latitude and the name of the place I want to look for. How do I edit the Google Maps URL so that I obtain all the places (name of the places) near a set of coordinates?
I know I could do this using Google Map API, but just for a link seems a lot of trouble.
What do you want to search near that known place?
For example if you want to search a restaurant near a known place you can use the parameters "q=" and "near=" and construct this URL: maps.google.com/?q=restaurant&near=47.154719,27.60551
For a list of complete parameters you can see this: https://web.archive.org/web/20070708030513/http://mapki.com/wiki/Google_Map_Parameters
Depending on what is the format you want your information in you can add at the end of the url the parameter output like this: maps.google.com/?q=restaurant&near=47.154719,27.60551&output=kml
For more types of output format you can read chapter 2 of this: http://csie-tw.blogspot.de/2009/06/android-driving-direction-route-path.html
As of Jan 2018 the latest URL is:
https://google.com/maps/search/your search string (address, landmark, city, etc. Spaces are ok)
Examples:
https://google.com/maps/search/empire state building
https://google.com/maps/search/1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20500
You can use the new URL for Google Maps: https://www.google.com/maps/@39.774769,-74.86084,18z equivalent to http://maps.google.com/?ll=39.774769,-74.86084.
39.774769 is the latitude and -74.86084 is longitude and 18z is 18 zoom level.
Google now has a documentation page dedicated to Maps URLs:
https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/urls/guide
An API key is not required.
Manipulating one of the examples, I came up with this URL scheme that fits your question:
A valid example of this would be:
https://www.google.com/maps/search/pizza/@41.089988,-81.542901,12z
This should show you all of the pizza places around Akron, Ohio.
Yeah, I had the same question for a long time and I found the perfect one. Here are some parameters from it.
q=
Used to specify the search query in Google maps search.
eg :
near=
z=
Zoom level. Can be set 19 normally, but in certain cases can go up to 23.
ll=
Latitude and longitude of the map centre point. Must be in that order. Requires decimal format. Interestingly, you can use this without q, in which case it doesn’t show a marker.
sll=
Similar to ll, only this sets the lat/long of the centre point for a business search. Requires the same input criteria as ll.
t=
Sets the kind of map shown. Can be set to:
saddr=
Sets the starting point for directions searches. You can also add text into this in brackets to bold it in the directions sidebar.
daddr=
Sets the end point for directions searches, and again will bold any text added in brackets.You can also add "+to:" which will set via points. These can be added multiple times.
via=
Allows you to insert via points in directions. Must be in CSV format. For example, via=1,5 addresses 1 and 5 will be via points without entries in the sidebar. The start point (which is set as 0), and 2, 3 and 4 will all show full addresses.
doflg=
Changes the units used to measure distance (will default to the standard unit in country of origin). Change to ptk for metric or ptm for imperial.
msa=
Does stuff with My Maps. Set to 0 show defined My Maps, b to turn the My Maps sidebar on, 1 to show the My Maps tab on its own, or 2 to go to the new My Map creator form.
reference : http://moz.com/ugc/everything-you-never-wanted-to-know-about-google-maps-parameters
You can use the query parameter
ll
for your lat and long, and you can use the query parameterq
for what you want to search.http://maps.google.com/?ll=39.774769,-74.86084
Or you can
http://maps.google.com/?q=your+query