Tag Archive:
Walkability

NYC BigApps Contest: Vote For Walkshed NY and Show Your Support For More Sustainable Cities

walkshed-logo-whitebgWe’re bulking up for some serious competition in New York City and you can help us!  In a push to make government more transparent, accessible and accountable through innovative software applications, New York City publicly released the NYC Data Mine, a large collection of location-based data sets from over two dozen city agencies.  Concurrently, the New York City Economic Development Corporation and the New York City Department of Information Technology & Telecommunications launched the NYC BigApps competition which will reward the best (most useful, inventive, visually appealing, effective, and commercially viable) software application submissions using City data with $20,000 in cash prizes.  Ultimately, the goal of the competition is to help make it easier and more fun to visit, live, and work in the City.

Screenshot of priorities map in Walkshed New York

Walkshed NY: Set your preferences and get a heat map of the most walkable areas in New York City that match your priorities.

Azavea has promoted open data initiatives by government for many years. We saw NYC BigApps as a great opportunity for us to demonstrate our commitment to building web-based applications that can both promote transparency and help our cities and communities operate in a more sustainable manner. In early October we held an internal competition to generate a series of ideas that would leverage the mountain of newly available NYC Data Mine data sets. Aaron Ogle’s proposal to extend his personal R&D project to NYC prevailed, and we set out to make it happen. Walkshed NYC is an expansion of our prototype walkability calculation and mapping web application, Walkshed Philadelphia.  The Walkshed New York app uses the following data layers from the NYC Data Mine:

  • Restaurants
  • Farmers Markets
  • Coffee Shops
  • PATH stops
  • Parks and Recreation locations
  • Playgrounds
  • Cultural Centers
  • WiFi Hotspots
  • Libraries
  • Post Offices

Aaron Ogle, the lead developer for Walkshed writes, “Walkshed enables users to make very precise and personal walkability calculations. Every distance we measure is an actual walking distance, rather than a distance calculated ‘as the crow flies’.  We give you enough data to make intelligent choices.  Walkability is not only proximity to basic amenities but also considers crime density, tree cover, and more.  Since Walkshed is built on DecisionTree, Azavea’s planning and geographic prioritization tool, users have the ability to set their priorities and create a walkshed that is tailored to their preferences.”

But measuring a city’s walkability is just the beginning.  Planning water sources, land use, optimal public transit routes, better sidewalk networks and bike lanes, traffic light timing, and distance from diverse habitats are just a few of the ways that geographic technology can help us promote more sustainable economies and environment.

button-home-votenow

Click this button to vote (short login will be required)

So, here’s where you come in.  The BigApps competition is awarding prizes based on two rounds of voting. The Popular Choice Award is based on votes received from public users of the competition site (here).  If you dig what we’re doing, please support us by visiting the site and voting for Walkshed New York! Voting opens on December 15 and closes January 7, 2010.  The second series of prizes will be determined by a panel of judges.

Thank you for your support!  If you’d like to give us feedback on Walkshed NY please contact Aaron Ogle at aogle@azavea.com.

“Greening the Post-Industrial City” Conference Review

"The conference... brought together stakeholders from the government, academic, nonprofit, and business worlds to discuss the future of Philadelphia's landscape."

Manufacturing decline and population loss have saddled many post-industrial American cities with massive amounts of vacant land. In Philadelphia, once a hub of industrial activity, tens of thousands of abandoned and underused parcels are scattered throughout the city. Maps of this vacant land reveal the extent and spatial patterning of the problem.

Azavea’s Megan Heckert and I participated in a re-imagining of Philadelphia’s vacant land during the Greening the Post-Industrial City conference, held at the Academy of Natural Sciences in late April. The conference, sponsored by Drexel University’s Engineering Cities Initiative, brought together stakeholders from the government, academic, nonprofit, and business worlds to discuss the future of Philadelphia’s landscape.

The topics of conversation ranged from reclaiming brownfields for industrial reuse, to transforming vacant residential lots into community gardens and farms, to rediscovering and redeveloping underused transit hubs throughout the city. A great many attendees were also extremely interested in one of our colleagues’ — Aaron Ogle — research project on mapping walkability in the city.

Left: Palmer Park. Right: Southwark Gardens. Beneath:
Vacant Lot. Photos by Dana Bauer

Nearly all the speakers and panelists emphasized the importance of finding sustainable solutions to the problem of vacant land — solutions that are eco-friendly, promote economic growth, and address the concerns and interests of community members. A crucial part of the process, said keynote speaker Mark Alan Hughes, the Mayor’s (former) Director of Sustainability, is developing mechanisms for accountability, including web-based tools that allow citizens to view and track public investment in redevelopment.

Throughout the conference, Megan and I listened to the ideas and goals of the stakeholders and explored ways GIS, mapping technologies, and data visualization could facilitate the re-imaging of idle lands and make Philadelphia a better, greener place.

Mapping Walkability: Finding the Best Places in Philadelphia to be Carfree and Carefree

"'...how can I find a walkable community?' I'm glad you asked...."
Photo courtesy of Tony
Fischer, Carpe Diem Photography
, via Flickr.com

It is clear that we Americans face many challenges today. The prospect of global climate change has many of us look for ways to reduce our carbon footprint. Record high energy prices earlier this year have made us all aware of how vulnerable we are to such price spikes. Such challenges are daunting, but many people have turned to an unlikely solution: walkability.

The core principle of walkability is quite simple: give people the option to live their lives without having to get in a car. Less need for a car instantly produces a number of positive individual benefits including 1) paying less for fuel, maintenance, parking, and insurance, 2) less exposure to energy price spikes, 3) reduced greenhouse gas emissions, and 4) a healthier, more active lifestyle. And these benefits become more pronounced if you are able shed a car altogether: no more car payment!

This is all well and good, but how can I find a walkable community? I’m glad you asked.

While living in Seattle, I became intrigued by Alan Durning of the Sightline Institute and his concept of a “walkshed” that scored a location based on the quantity and diversity of amenities within a one-mile radius. A year later, Walk Score, which drew heavily from Durning’s walkshed concept, went live as the first application in the world to map walkability. While Walk Score is a fantastic application with a clever methodology, it has a number of acknowledged limitations. Using Philadelphia as a prototype and as part of Azavea’s 10% research project program, I am currently researching ways to overcome some of these limitations to more accurately calculate and map walkability.

Map
showing the walking distance from points in Philadelphia to the closest
train, subway, or trolley stop.

The first requirement of this new methodology is the ability measure the walkability of a location by determining the actual walking distance to a variety of assets. In many cases, “as-the-crow-flies” distances are accurate enough, but that accuracy can degrade quickly with the presence of barriers (rivers, highways, etc), disjointed street networks, or extreme topography. In other words, I need to be able to programmatically detect the actual walking distance to my favorite restaurant on the other side of the Schuylkill River. It may only be a quarter mile as the crow flies, but being bound to the street grid could significantly increase that distance.

The most time consuming step was the development a friction layer for the entire city. This layer had to accurately represent the “friction” a person would encounter walking around the city. For example, a city street or park would represent low walking friction while navigating across a river or highway would be quite high. By taking streets, trails, parks, rivers, highways, and railroad tracks into account, I was able to calculate the walking friction of every point in Philadelphia. This friction layer now allows me to calculate the walking distance to any defined point in the city. Above, you see a sample screenshot that represents the walking distance from every point in Philadelphia to the closest train, subway, or trolley stop.

I find this research incredibly fascinating, but the best part is that this project is just getting started! I have several new walking distance layers in the queue for amenities like bus stops, car-share locations, parks, grocery stores, farmers markets, cultural venues, and more. After these data sets are complete, I have plans to roll out a publicly available web application built on Azavea’s DecisionTree product. This application will not only mimic most of Walk Score’s functionality, but will allow each user give personalized weights to each walkability indicator.