Map of Lithuania in KML format
A map built from OpenStreetMap data, ready to download
Customize the map
Open this place's area in the constructor and adjust everything to your needs
Open in constructor →Map passport
What this map contains by default
This is how the map is built as-is — every setting can be changed in the constructor.
About KML
Map of Lithuania in KML — an export of real OpenStreetMap data for the selected area.
Keyhole Markup Language — an XML geodata format for Google Earth and Google Maps. Supports styles, icons, descriptions, and 3D views for vivid map visualization.
Which layers are in the file
This file for the selected area contains:
- Roads
- Buildings
- Water
- Greenery
- Points of interest
Coordinate systems
WGS 84 (EPSG:4326), selectable in the wizard
Compatibility
Units
Meters (projected in the chosen coordinate system)
| Category | GIS |
| File extension | .kml |
| Tier | Free |
What's in the KML map of Lithuania
1,285,773 buildings (112,396 residential, 2,196 commercial, 2,391 industrial, 890 religious), 90,980.4 km of roads, 51,320 points of interest, 100 landmarks.
The area covers 67,149 km², with about 19 buildings per km².
Mostly unclassified roads 31,187.1 km, residential streets 17,841.4 km, service roads 17,677.6 km.
The map marks 392 parks and 6,151 water bodies.
Key amenities: schools — 1,130, supermarkets — 992, convenience stores — 1,574.
Public transport: 16,914 bus stops, 46 tram stops, 164 rail stations.
KML file with 1,285,773 buildings and 100 landmarks for Google Earth visualization.
Main streets: Liepų g., Sodų g., Miško g., Beržų g., Pievų g.
Landmarks: Klangių etnografinė sodyba, Atominis bunkeris, Palangos kurorto muziejus, Veliuonos krašto istorijos muziejus, Vikingų kaimas
How to use KML for Lithuania
- Select the Lithuania map area on the main page
- Choose KML format and configure export settings
- Click Export and wait for processing
- Download the file and use in your application
Programs that open KML
FAQ: KML for Lithuania
How to open KML in Google Earth?
Download the file and double-click it — Google Earth will open it automatically. Or drag the file into the program window.
