geoalberta2013
DESCRIPTION
In June 2013, Albertans witnessed a catastrophic flooding event described by the provincial government as the worst in Alberta's history. During crisis events, public access to up-to-date information plays an important role in raising situational awareness, delivering assistance to those affected by the crisis, and to aid the development of mitigation plans. Crisis mapping, using platforms such as Ushahidi have been used extensively to help people find and use critical emergency information, document road and bridge closures, power outage areas, emergency aid locations, etc. In this paper, we present the development of an interactive flood mapping mashup for the City of Calgary, based on free and open source software packages. The system incorporates state-of-the-art technologies such as Web 2.0 mapping APIs, WMTS (Web Map Tile Service), and open geo-data standards to implement the user interface and the back-end mapping server. WMTS technology was used to provide the base map. To do so, City of Calgary geospatial data was extracted from OpenStreetMap, and map tiles were generated using TileMill, MapBox’s cartographic design studio. The principal server-side component used to deploy the map data was PHP Tile Server. On the client-side, Leaflet’s API was used to develop the mapping functionality and visualize crisis information. Web client technologies HTML5, CSS3, and AJAX were used to rapidly develop a flexible and interactive mapping solution. Spatial data was encoded using GeoJSON extracted from the textual information provided by the City of Calgary. These tools, and open data allowed us to rapidly deploy the site and provide citizens access to a wide range of crisis data via a single map.TRANSCRIPT
A Crisis Map Mashup for
Calgary’s 2013 Flood
Ebrahim Poorazizi, Andrew Hunter Department of Geomatics Engineering
University of Calgary
Images courtesy: © Calgary Herald, The City of Calgary, John Van Sloten, Calgary Sun
Calgary’s Flood 2013
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Crisis Management
Public Access to Up-to-date Information
Created by Tagxedo.com
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Crisis Mapping
http://haiti.openstreetmap.nl/ http://www.sinsai.info/ http://google.org/crisismap/2013-boulder-floods
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Crisis Mapping
http://haiti.openstreetmap.nl/
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Pros:
Knowledge of
infrastructure
Track changes
Cons:
Symbology
Cartography
Crisis Mapping
http://google.org/crisismap/2013-boulder-floods
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Pros:
Up-to-date base maps
Find users’ locations
Crowdsourced data
Cons:
Symbology
Cartography
Crisis Mapping
http://www.sinsai.info/
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Pros:
Based on user-generated
content
Better understanding of
victims situation
Symbology
Cons:
Track users’ location
A Crisis Map for Calgary
See data everywhere in a simple map
Find information in one place
Depend on the latest information
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Starting Point
June 20, 2013 @ 8:28 AM: the Municipal
Emergency Plan (MEP) was activated.
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Image courtesy: © The City of Calgary
Fallout
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Challenge Accepted
• June 20, 2013 @ whole day: “…searching…, hmmm, there is no online map to show the flooded area…”
• June 21, 2013 @ 9:38 AM: “…let’s develop an interactive map quickly!”
• June 21, 2013 @ 10:00 AM: “…challenge accepted!”
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Requirements
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System Architecture
• Cross-browser solution
• Leaflet JS API
• HTML5, CSS3 • GeoJSON
• PHP TileServer • Base map (.mbtiles)
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User Interface
• Leaflet JS
• Leaflet plugins
• HTML5, CSS3
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Critical Emergency Info
• The City of Calgary
Website/Newsroom
• Updates via Twitter
• Extract to GeoJSON
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Base Data
• OpenStreetMap
• PostGIS
• TileMill
• PHP TileServer
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The Final Product
• June 23, 2013 @ 12:00 PM: Done!
http://planyourplace.ca/flooding_2013/ 17
Wrap Up
• July 4, 2013 @ 10:16 AM: The City of
Calgary’s local state of emergency
was lifted.
• We kept updating the information until
July 8, 2013 @ 9:00 AM
• 18 updates during the crisis
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Lessons Learned
• Web 2.0
• FOSS Tools
• Open Data
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Current Challenges
• Use of obsolete technologies
• Offering government open data via
an open APIs
• Interoperable solutions to publish data
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Thank You Any Question?
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Ebrahim Poorazizi
PhD Student Geomatics Eng.
Andrew Hunter
Assistant Professor
Geomatics Eng. [email protected]