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Tag Archive:
ArcGIS

We’re thrilled to announce the launch of the new version of our DecisionTree product. Over this past year, the DecisionTree team has made significant advances both in user interface design and in the architecture of our calculation engine, and it’s exciting to be ready to show them off. If you want to check out what it looks like, we have both an Elections and Advocacy demo and an Economic Development demo. Otherwise, read on to find out what we’ve changed.
If you’re not familiar with DecisionTree, take a look at our December 2008 newsletter to see an example of how the City of Asheville, NC has used it, or head over to the DecisionTree home page. DecisionTree is a set of innovative web-based planning and prioritization tools that can be used to help make geographic decisions. In DecisionTree, users select and weight decision factors to find the areas that best meet the objectives of a project, be it siting a business, making real estate investments, improving service delivery, or optimizing direct-mail, political campaigns or fundraising efforts. And best of all, DecisionTree can be customized to leverage existing data and it’s simple and fast enough to run on the web.
So what’s new? The interface has had a top-to-bottom makeover to make it easier to use both for first-time and expert users.
- It now looks and feels more like a desktop application, with a ribbon-style interface along the top of the page that groups tools together with easy-to-identify icons.
- We’ve added a splash screen that introduces the basic concept of choosing factors to create a priority map as well as a tour that walks users through the basic functionality of the site. The workflow has changed to a simple step-by-step process in a single window.
- We’ve updated the styling and graphics to be more appealing as well as extremely customizable, enabling individual installations of DecisionTree to use colors, themes, and graphics that integrate well with organizations’ existing websites.
We’ve added several other features:
- A button to export a priority map into KML for viewing in Google Earth.
- Extended map navigation controls, and ways of saving and loading scenarios.
- Support for a range of new tiled base maps, from ESRI’s ArcGIS Online services to OpenStreetMap.
In terms of analysis, users can now limit the calculation to only a part of the map—such as a county or a tax incentive area—using a mask. They can also look at the individual priority map of each factor they’ve chosen, giving a better sense of how the composite map was generated.
Oh, and fellow geeks out there, you’ll be interested to know that there’s a lot of interesting new magic behind the scenes. As software developers, we find DecisionTree to be a fascinating project to work on— it’s a distributed calculation engine that can split up individual requests across machines and processor cores to speed up each map calculation. We’re continually improving the engine and making it easier to integrate into web applications. Forgive my jargon here for a minute… We used the Ruby on Rails framework to build a REST API to make it straightforward for other developers to build new user interfaces on top of the DecisionTree engine. This interface is what Aaron Ogle, another Azavea developer, used to build the recently launched Walkshed application (see above) — definitely check it out if you haven’t yet.
We have two DecisionTree samples, one focused on elections in Philadelphia and another on economic development in the five-county Philadelphia region. Take a look and let us know what you think!
" ... learn whether things adolescents do and places they go are associated with whether they will be the victim of violence ... visually mapping a verbal account of activities provides researchers with a powerful tool..."

Map tracking points of a victim’s activity
in the 24 hours preceding a violent assault.
Gunshot injury is the leading cause of death in 10-19 year old African American males and the second leading cause of adolescent death overall. Assaultive injuries appear as the end result of a causative web of factors that include alcohol, firearms, and dangerous urban environments. Yet little is known about the epidemiology of assaultive injury from guns and other weapons among adolescents.
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine, have set out to learn whether things adolescents do and places they go are associated with whether they will be the victim of violence. The project, the Space-Time Adolescent Risk Study (STARS) is led by Douglas Wiebe and Charles Branas of the Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Therese Richmond from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing who aim to identify key behavioral and environmental factors that put young people ages 10-19 at risk for being assaulted, thereby spearheading an innovative application of epidemiological space-time modeling.
Azavea was contracted to build the space-time activity tracking software tool to help health care professionals in interviewing adolescent victims of violent crime. STARS Travel Path is a desktop mapping application and database, and is designed to help interviewers guide adolescents injured in an assault through the process of reconstructing the series of events and encounters in the 24-hour time period preceding the assault. Using laptops with GIS data and the STARS application installed, trained interviewers work with each victim to record the victim’s verbal account of his or her activities by placing digital markers indicating the location of each significant activity, on a street map or high-resolution satellite photo.
The interviewer is able to accurately assign times and other information to the markers on a victim’s map – including the assault event – based on factors such as the victim’s mode of transportation to or from each event, speed of movement, interruptions, and other environmental factors. The interviewer also inputs key data on whether the victim was in possession of a gun or took drugs and/or alcohol at any time in the 24 hours prior to the assault. Typically 80-100 points of activity are recorded on each victim’s map. Typically 80-100 points of activity are recorded on each victim’s map. Visually mapping a verbal account of activities provides researchers with a powerful tool that aids in accurately recording complex space/time data.
“Epidemiologic research of this type – that aims to identify risk factors for injury – has typically collected data for only the time at which the injury occurred. We expect that the activities that lead up to an assault are equally important to consider. This application lets us do this by recreating adolescents’ moment-to-moment paths with a high degree of spatial and temporal accuracy. An additional plus is that the mapping interface seems to help keep participants engaged during the interview process.” – Doug Wiebe, University of Pennsylvania Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
The STARS activity mapping application utilizes ESRI’s ArcGIS Engine toolkit to quickly generate and display customized maps, and geocode and record points of activity. The point data and the factors related to each point are then stored in a simple database. Data gathered in the field, on hand-held computers, can be uploaded to a master database linked by X-Y coordinates to environmental data, statistically analyzed. Ultimately, it is hoped that the results of this study will help researchers understand how daily routine, social interactions, use of drugs and alcohol and possession of weapons effects an adolescent individual’s risk of being assaulted with a weapon.
"ArcGIS... enables access to the entire basket of GIS analysis capability included in the ArcObjects component framework."

Azavea was founded to build web-based software tools that support geographic analysis. For the past seven years, most of these applications have been based on the ESRI ArcIMS platform. ArcIMS was designed for map display and geographic queries and it does this well, but, apart from visualization, geocoding and routing, the platform’s analytical capability is limited. As ArcIMS has evolved, ESRI has also been steadily extending the analytical capability of its flagship ArcGIS platform, but these capabilities were largely inaccessible from ArcIMS.
ArcGIS Server (AGS) changes all of that. It enables access to the entire basket of GIS analysis capability included in the ArcObjects component framework. For the first time, it also packages the full capabilities of a geographic database, ArcSDE, with the map serving and analysis capabilities. In other words, it is a complete platform for server-based geographic analysis and visualization.

City of Philadelphia, Department of Records’ ParcelExplorer application, developed by Azavea using ArcGIS Server.
What do I mean by analysis? Well, anything that you can do with Spatial Analyst, toolboxes, ArcObjects and the modeling and geoprocessing platform can now be done on the server including: Map Algebra (for raster analysis); feature calculations such as merge, dissolve, buffer and intersect; routing; geographic searches; and models (sequences of processing steps that answer a question or transform a data set). And ArcGIS Server is not just about analysis. It enables you to publish maps on the web with the cartographic flexibility that you have with ArcMap and even supports digitizing and editing of map features. Finally, it is packaged with a set of software development tools that make building compelling web applications easier and faster.
With the release of ArcGIS Server 9.3, Azavea has seen substantial performance improvements as well as the release of new and powerful toolkits such as REST, Javascript and Flex API’s that support the rapid development of responsive and lightweight web applications.
ESRI will continue to support ArcIMS for a few years, but will not develop the platform further. All new R&D will be rolled into this ArcGIS Server product, so this is the platform for the future. Do you have questions about ArcGIS Server? Don’t hesitate to get in touch.
Tags: ArcGIS, What the Heck Is...
In 1896 sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois was invited by the University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia’s College Settlement Association to conduct a survey that was the basis for the 1899 book, The Philadelphia Negro. The survey focused on blacks living in the seventh ward, defined as the area in Center City between Spruce Street and South Street, from Seventh Street east to the Schuylkill River.
Du Bois lived in Philadelphia for a year during which he went door-to-door, interviewing each of the several thousand black households. He classified each of them by social class according to his own judgment and used colors to represent each group on a map of the seventh ward. Unfortunately, the actual individual data he collected in 1896 no longer exists. What we do have, however, is a map that he produced, showing the social class for the households in this area.

A historic W.E.B DuBois map (c. 1896) mapping data on blacks living in Philadelphia’s 7th ward.
In 2005 a group at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Design, led by project director, Amy Hillier – Assistant Professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning in the School of Design, began collecting and mapping historical demographic and spatial data about Philadelphia’s old seventh ward at the time of Du Bois’ study. Their goal for the project, called “Mapping the Du Bois Philadelphia Negro” and funded by the National Endowment for Humanities, was to use historical data in a modern GIS system to allow scholars and students to explore the historic area of the seventh ward and the people who lived there, and perform their own analyses, in much the same way that Du Bois himself would have. Additionally, the “Mapping Du Bois” team hopes to provide valuable research tools to middle- and high-school students in order for them to more clearly understand the black experience in Philadelphia at the turn of the century.
Azavea was invited to partner with “Mapping the Du Bois Philadelphia Negro” to develop a web application that would enable the recently collected project data to be viewed and analyzed spatially by users. The application uses ESRI’s ArcGIS Server software as a mapping engine and the ESRI’s WebADF for the inclusion of dynamic maps on the web site. Click here to access the beta version of the application (best viewed in IE). A complete version of the application with even more exciting features will be released in a few weeks… so stay tuned!
The application gives students the opportunity to map many different data points, such as race, immigrant status, and household population, across the old seventh ward. Users can simultaneously view the data on modern GIS analysis map layers as well as on the historic maps Du Bois created. Development on the map is ongoing, but one of the chief challenges has been the shape of the Old Seventh Ward – it is a wide strip the cuts across the south edge of what we would now consider ‘Center City’, but is only a few blocks high. This has required a web interface that is a bit different from the norm.
Tags: ArcGIS, GIS and History
"...
it can be adapted to virtually any historic, cultural or commercial asset."
We have just launched the mobile version of PhillyHistory. It is now accessible from most cell phones, handheld computers and other mobile devices enabling anyone to search the more than 45,000 historic photos currently on the PhillyHistory site at anytime and from anywhere.
PhillyHistory Mobile can serve pedestrians and visitors curious to see what their surroundings used to look like; organizers of historic tours; and teachers who are interested in making their history curricula more interactive. It has a simple search screen in which you can enter an address or intersection of nearby historic or cultural sites. The resulting display returns a map of the area showing coordinates for various historic and cultural assets in close proximity, accompanied by photos of those assets.
This innovative mobile website leverages Sajara, our web-based digital asset management software. It was built on ESRI’s ArcGIS server technology and ASP.NET 2.0 Mobile Controls. The greatest advantage of Sajara is that it can be adapted to virtually any historic, cultural or commercial asset. It can be applied to cultural resources of any kind (murals, architectural assets, and paintings), tours, real estate, the restaurant industry, and environmental information.
The mobile website has been tested for browsers on various devices using device emulators including the Pocket PC, Openwave, Sony Ericsson and many more. It’s designed to work on phones with Internet browsers that support wml, html or xhtml.
PhillyHistory Mobile is an extension of PhillyHistory.org, developed by Azavea in 2004 to help the City Archives preserve its deteriorating and aging photographic memories, PhillyHistory.org attracts thousands of unique visitors each month. Its e-commerce module supports funding of the project and creates revenue through the sale of prints and digital photos. New images from the City Archives’ estimated two million photos are uploaded and viewable from both PhillyHistory media at a rate of two thousand per month. And now you can take a mobile tour of Philadelphia’s past from a handheld computer or other mobile device, visit mobile.phillyhistory.org and enjoy your ride on what Philadelphia Magazine has called “your own flux-capacitor-fueled DeLorean”!
We all know what a ‘toolbox’ is in the physical world, but what do we mean by a toolbox in a GIS context? Toolboxes are a way to wrap up a series of GIS processes into a small software program. The ESRI ArcGIS platform includes several toolboxes with the desktop ArcView, ArcEditor and ArcInfo licensees. These toolboxes include things like ‘Data Management’, ‘Conversion Tools’ and ‘Analysis Tools’. Additional toolboxes are provided with extensions such as Spatial Analyst.
But toolboxes are not limited to functionality delivered by ESRI. Any GIS software process can be automated and turned into a toolbox for use in your organization. Toolboxes can be created from GIS models, python scripts or custom ArcObjects programs.
At Azavea, we are using the toolbox technology to automate the integration of the legislative districts that drive our Cicero web service. Our DecisionTree product also includes a custom toolbox that helps to create the raster GRID files that can be used as inputs in the online application. But the most exciting development with toolboxes arrived last year with the release of ArcGIS Server.
ArcGIS Server is much more than the successor to the internet map server technology in ArcIMS. While it is able to perform tasks such as map generation and geocoding, the full range of capabilities in the ArcObjects framework can be accessed. In addition, many types of toolboxes and models can be ‘published’ as web pages that enable users of an ArcGIS Server application to run those tools without the desktop application. This is an incredibly powerful capability. It means that not only can you build models and toolboxes to automate your desktop processes, but you can now enable visitors to your website to perform many of the same tasks. So, for example, let’s say that you work at a land trust. You might have built a conservation prioritization model to enable people inside your organization to quickly assess properties based on a series of input data sets. ArcGIS Server now makes it possible to make that model available to the town planning boards, citizen groups and other stakeholders in your region.
Tags: ArcGIS, What the Heck Is...
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Azavea. All rights reserved.
340 North 12th Street, Suite 402
Philadelphia, PA 19107.
Tel: (215) 925 - 2600 Fax: (215) 925 - 2663
340 North 12th Street, Suite 402
Philadelphia, PA 19107.
Tel: (215) 925 - 2600 Fax: (215) 925 - 2663





