Skip to contents

Convert between Irish grid references and Irish Grid coordinates or an sf object.

An Irish grid reference is a way of referring to a square of some size on the Irish Grid geographic coordinate system (EPSG:29903). Rather than an X and Y coordinate, an Irish grid reference consists of a letter, optionally followed by an easting, northing and possibly a final letter. The size of the square referred to - the precision of the Irish grid reference - is defined by the number of digits in the easting and northing and presence or absence of a final letter. Examples include “N” - referring to a particular 100 km square, “N16” - referring to a particular 10 km square within “N”, “N16K” - the tetrad form of grid reference referring to a particular 2 km square within “N16”, and “N 12345 67890” - referring to a particular 1 m square. Spaces between letters, easting and northing in an Irish grid reference are optional.

This package supports Irish grid references of 1 m, 10 m, 100 m, 1 km, 2 km, 10 km and 100 km precision. Datasets containing a mix of precision are supported.

Irish grid references can be converted to and from Irish Grid coordinates (X and Y), or to and from sf sf (simple feature) objects in any coordinate reference system.

Irish grid references can be converted to point locations or polygons. Point locations can be either the south-west corner or the centroid of each Irish grid reference. Polygons each span the entire extent of an Irish grid reference - the size of each polygon is precision-aware.

Installation

To install the production version of igr from CRAN:

To install the development version of igr from GitHub:

# Install remotes package if needed
install.packages("remotes")

# Install development version of igr package from GitHub
remotes::install_github("digitalnature-ie/igr")

Usage

To check validity of Irish grid references:

  • igr_is_valid() indicates which elements in a character vector are valid Irish grid references

To convert from Irish grid references:

  • igr_to_ig() converts from a vector of Irish grid references to a matrix of Irish Grid coordinates
  • st_igr_as_sf() converts from a data.frame containing Irish grid references to an sf object containing points or polygons

To convert to Irish grid references:

  • ig_to_igr() converts from a list or matrix of Irish Grid coordinates to Irish grid references
  • st_irishgridrefs() converts from an sf object to Irish grid references

Check Irish grid references

library(igr)

# Sample grid references
igrs <- c("A", "A16", "A123678", "BAD", "I12", "", "B125", "Z", "N12D")

igr_is_valid(igrs)
#> [1]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE

Convert from Irish grid references

# Sample grid references
igrs <- c("A", "D12", "J53", "M5090", "N876274", "S1234550000", "R10H", "X")

# Converting south west corners of Irish grid references to Irish Grid coordinates
igr_to_ig(igrs)
#> $x
#> [1]      0 310000 350000 150000 287600 212345 112000 200000
#> 
#> $y
#> [1] 400000 420000 330000 290000 227400 150000 104000      0

# Converting centroids of Irish grid references to Irish Grid coordinates
igr_to_ig(igrs, centroids = TRUE)
#> $x
#> [1]  50000.0 315000.0 355000.0 150500.0 287650.0 212345.5 113000.0 250000.0
#> 
#> $y
#> [1] 450000.0 425000.0 335000.0 290500.0 227450.0 150000.5 105000.0  50000.0

# Sample grid references in a data.frame
igrs_df <- data.frame(igr = igrs)

# Converting to an sf object of POINT features
st_igr_as_sf(igrs_df, "igr")
#> Simple feature collection with 8 features and 1 field
#> Geometry type: POINT
#> Dimension:     XY
#> Bounding box:  xmin: 0 ymin: 0 xmax: 350000 ymax: 420000
#> Projected CRS: TM75 / Irish Grid
#>           igr              geometry
#> 1           A       POINT (0 4e+05)
#> 2         D12 POINT (310000 420000)
#> 3         J53 POINT (350000 330000)
#> 4       M5090 POINT (150000 290000)
#> 5     N876274 POINT (287600 227400)
#> 6 S1234550000 POINT (212345 150000)
#> 7        R10H POINT (112000 104000)
#> 8           X       POINT (2e+05 0)

A map of Ireland with a dot at the south west corner of each sample grid reference.

# Converting to an sf object of POLYGON features
st_igr_as_sf(igrs_df, "igr", polygon = TRUE)
#> Simple feature collection with 8 features and 1 field
#> Geometry type: POLYGON
#> Dimension:     XY
#> Bounding box:  xmin: 0 ymin: 0 xmax: 360000 ymax: 5e+05
#> Projected CRS: TM75 / Irish Grid
#>           igr                       geometry
#> 1           A POLYGON ((1e+05 5e+05, 1e+0...
#> 2         D12 POLYGON ((320000 430000, 32...
#> 3         J53 POLYGON ((360000 340000, 36...
#> 4       M5090 POLYGON ((151000 291000, 15...
#> 5     N876274 POLYGON ((287700 227500, 28...
#> 6 S1234550000 POLYGON ((212346 150001, 21...
#> 7        R10H POLYGON ((114000 106000, 11...
#> 8           X POLYGON ((3e+05 1e+05, 3e+0...

A map of Ireland with polygons spanning each sample grid reference. The polygons range in size from 100 km square to 1 m square.

Convert to Irish grid references

# Sample Irish Grid coordinates
p <- matrix(c(0, 490000, 400000, 0, 453000, 4000), ncol = 2, byrow = TRUE)
colnames(p) <- c("x", "y")

p
#>           x      y
#> [1,]      0 490000
#> [2,] 400000      0
#> [3,] 453000   4000

# Convert to Irish grid references
ig_to_igr(p)
#> [1] "A000900" "Z000000" "Z530040"

# Sample Irish Grid coordinates in an sf object
p_sf <- sf::st_as_sf(data.frame(p), crs = 29903, coords = c("x", "y"))

# Convert sf object to Irish grid references
st_irishgridrefs(p_sf, sep = " ")
#> [1] "A 000 900" "Z 000 000" "Z 530 040"
# Append Irish grid references to original sf object (using base R)
p_sf$igr <- st_irishgridrefs(p_sf)

# Append Irish grid references to original sf object (using tidy R)
p_sf <- p_sf |>
  dplyr::mutate(igr = st_irishgridrefs(p_sf))

Design and Implementation

This package is designed to work seamlessly in tidy R. Function names, parameter names, and function behaviour attempt to follow conventions in related R packages such as sf.

igr is written using base R where possible to minimise package dependencies, and adopts the tidyverse coding style.

R Packages, 2nd edition, by Hadley Wickham and Jennifer Bryan was of great assistance during package development.

Feedback

Please log any unexpected behaviour or suggestions via GitHub Issues.