Title: GIS Data
1GIS Data
- Network Data
- Land use Land use Classification
21. Network data
- A network does not have to be streets or roads,
although they are probably the networks you are
most familiar with. Networks can represent
rivers, pipelines, and utilities. The route does
not actually have to exist in the real world as a
set of linear features. An airline route or a
course charted for a ship can also be represented
as a network. - Because a network is a set of interconnected
lines, you can model the movement of goods,
services, energy, information, or even people
throughout the network.
3Network GIS data
- Any system of interconnected linear features
4Two Views of Networks
- Geometry and Connectivity
5Two views of Networks
6Simple Network Features
- Single main servicing two houses
- one-to-one mapping
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8Two operational contexts
- In a street network, the commodities
(automobiles) that flow through a network have a
will of their own, and decide how they will
flow through the network. - In a utility network, the commodities (water,
electricity) have no will of their own, and the
network imposes a flow direction.
9Street and Utility Networks
Street networks have non-directed flow Utility
networks have directed flow
10Uses - Location-Allocation
- Finding a subset of locations from a set of
potential locations that best serve some existing
demand so as minimize some cost - Locate sites to best serve allocated demand
- Application areas are warehouse location,
services, banks, ATMs, public phones, fire
stations, schools
11Initial Configuration
12Available Sites
13Location-Allocation Outputs
- The best sites
- The optimal allocation of demand locations to
those sites - Lots of statistical and summary information about
that particular allocation
14Final Configuration
15Find the optimal path
- Using Network Analyst, you can find the path that
will reach specified locations in the most
efficient order. The path can be the shortest
path or the fastest path. Network Analyst also
gives you the option to return to the point of
origin when defining a path. - Network Analyst provides you with directions for
navigating a route. The directions can be
customized to include different units, such as
time or distance, or landmarks to help you find
your way while navigating the route.
16Vehicle Routing
17Finding the Best Route
- Finds the route that minimizes travel cost
through a series of stops - Options
- Cost Attribute (kms, minutes, etc)
- Directions
18Finding the Closest Facility
- Finds the routes that minimizes travel cost
between incidents and multiple facilities - Options
- Cost Attribute
- Number of facilities to find
- Directions
19Finding Service Areas
- Find the area or lines that can be traversed
within a specified cost - Create polygons around specified locations
- Create service area lines
20More Network Analysis Options
- Other parameters include
- Barriers
- U-Turn policy
- Restrictions
- Exact route vs. Hierarchical route
Exact route
Hierarchical route (major roads)
212. Land use
- Land Based Classification Standards
22Classification Standards
- Standardize land-use categories
- Across Scales (cities, counties, regions, etc.)
- Across Geography (parcels, traffic zones, etc.)
- Across Purposes (resource management, mapping
etc.) - Update land-use mapping and coloring
- Provide tools for land-use data sharing
- Conversion tools
- Make it as flexible as possible
23- Prof. Guttenberg had developed
- a conceptual framework for classifying land uses
across multiple characteristics - a method that will allow multiple ways of coding
a land use
- The Language of Planning by Albert Z. Guttenberg,
University of Illinois Press, 1993.
24Landuse characteristics
- Recognized that land uses have multi dimensional
characteristics - Uses have physical characteristics
- Uses have functional characteristics
- Uses have structural characteristics
- Uses have development characteristics
- Uses have ownership characteristics
- And several other characteristics . . .
25Classification method
- Tied the conceptual framework to database
technologies so land uses can be shared across
multiple scales, applications, and jurisdictions - Devised a model that allows customization without
breaking the logic of classification
26LBCS Data Model
27LBCS Coding in Land-Use Databases
28Activity Tabbed
29Function Tabbed
30Examples of multi dimensionality
- Residential
- Home occupations? Nursing homes?
- Commercial
- Health Clubs? Hotels?
- Institutional--Military
- Bases, barracks, houses, schools, airports
- Recreational
- Tot-lots to national parks
31Specific multi-dimensional examples
- Local government
- Office activities
- Public administration function
- Jails, police stations
- Strip commercial
- Goods sales, services
- Offices, post office
- Storefront church
- Public School
- Classrooms, Playgrounds, Bus garages
32GIS Theme Ownership
33Color Code Activity
34Color Code Structure
35Remote Sensing Data in Land Use
- It is a valuable source for large scale mapping
- Source of information on
- land use/land cover
- vegetation type, distribution, condition
- surface waters
- river networks
- geomorphology
- monitor change
361984 Land Use Map
Land use Water 249.43
km2 Urban 1348.53 Km2 Forest
10700.92 km2 Agriculture 17780.62
km2 Pasture 175.50 km2 Grass
2609.45 km2
371999 Land Use Map
Land use Water 268.74
km2 Urban 2312.35 Km2 Forest
11182.39 km2 Agriculture 16675.65
km2 Pasture 1308.23km2 Grass
1518.18 km2
38Urban Area Change from 1984 - 1999
39MSS data - 19 Jun 75
MSS data - 1 Aug 86
TM data - 22 Jun 92
40Exam questions
SA Atlas has provide access to state owned
spatial data. Investigate the type of information
on SA Atlas relevant to your field of study (e.g.
Surveying, GIS, Planning, Resource management
etc). http//www.atlas.sa.gov.au/
- List 5 GIS datasets (themes) on SA Atlas most
useful to your field of study. Discuss what the
datasets contains and how it is useful in your
filed of study?