The quad at University College London is notably impressive, as is Trafalgar Square. The model is far from complete but we assume other areas are on their way.
Music: London Town by Rod Kinny on unsigned.

Google Earth Zoom from digitalurban on Vimeo.

This weeks NewScientist has a good article entilted '3D mash-up maps let you 'edit' the world. Written by Colin Barras it notes that armchair explorers who soar over 3D cityscapes on their computer may be used to the idea of maps with an extra dimension. But they are now getting accurate enough to offer much more than a preview of your next holiday destination. Accurate, large-scale 3D maps could soon change the way we design, manage and relate to our urban environments.'
Google Earth has taken some notable strides forward recently with the inclusion of auto generated 3D cities. To such a level that the output rivals Microsoft's Earth which for a while did have the lead in terms of visual quality. The Google Earth blog reported last week that Cardiff and Dublin had been added and now Birmingham joins the throng - see the movie below:

Google has teamed up with the people behind Monopoly to launch a global online version running on top of Google Maps and perhaps Google Earth (?). Details are scarce at the moment but an announcement is imminent via both the game's official site and the blog.
Of note is the mention for SketchUp users to check back September 7th (today)....

The movie below details a spherical display under the name of Panorama Ball Vision:
Google has added 3D Tours to its Google Earth Gallery, of particular note is the 3D Buildings category. The category provides a number of self-running tours on various themes. The tours showcase 3D buildings (along with bridges and statues and other structures) around the world, most of which were built by Google SketchUp users.
Urban Tick over at urbantick.blogspot.com is becoming a 'must read' we know we are slightly biased as it comes out of the same lab as us here at digital urban, but the work is really starting to look interesting. Two posts grab our attention, firstly the Urban Diary Week 3 with two movies recorded in Google Earth with the satelitte view turned off - this is interesting as its using Google Earth purely as a visualisation engine. Secondly, a post on Ant Trails and couple of great movies on visualising their paths.