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A Tour of Geodesign Methods and Tools Dr. Michael Flaxman Geodesign Technologies, Inc.

A Tour of Geodesign Methods and Tools

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A Tour of Geodesign Methods and Tools. Dr. Michael Flaxman Geodesign Technologies, Inc. Overview. Definitions & Tools Implications of methods on tools Ways of Thinking About Tools Chronological Approach Taxonomic Approach. Caveat / Scope. Necessarily incomplete view - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

A Tour of Geodesign Methods and Tools

Dr. Michael FlaxmanGeodesign Technologies, Inc.

Page 2: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Definitions & Tools◦ Implications of methods on tools

Ways of Thinking About Tools◦ Chronological Approach◦ Taxonomic Approach

Overview

Page 3: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Necessarily incomplete view

Covering the most widely-known tools

Purposefully omitting tools to be discussed by others in the forum

Caveat / Scope

Page 4: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Several geodesign definitions are in use

◦ Inclusive and non-technical definitions “Geography by Design” – Steinitz

◦ Narrower and more technical “… a design and planning method which tightly couples

the creation of design proposals with impact simulations informed by geographic contexts.” - Flaxman

Definitions

Page 5: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

By broader definitions, almost all GIS & CAD systems, and even non-digital tools could be considered “geodesign tools”

However, I prefer to stick to my earlier definition, and include tools which◦ Are “tightly coupled”◦ Include “impact simulations informed by

geographic context”

Definitions & Tools

Page 6: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Design methods may or may not start with explicit goals◦ Often have only implicit goals (accommodate Use

X legally, minimizing initial costs)◦ “Client goals” are most often quantified◦ “Public interest”/sustainability only considered

relative to legal requirements

“Informed by geographic context” implies non-trivial representation of contextual area◦ ~= GIS ?!

Relationship with Goals & Metrics

Page 7: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Implicit or narrowly-considered goals tend to lead to very limited representations of geographic context

In many cases, the ‘site’ is considered as a parcel boundary, floating in “paper space”

This, in turn, implies that only components of the design itself are significant◦ Existing site presumed to have no pre-existing

values worthy of consideration

Representation of Contextual Geography

Page 8: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

In contrast to “paper space” design methods, geodesign requires the ability to◦ Embed proposed changes in context of existing

site and neighborhood◦ Compute impacts based on geographic context

Introduces in technical terms, requirement for◦ Georeferencing◦ Ability to compute (or request computation of)

“design + context”

Deepening and Broadening “Design Context”

Page 9: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

At site to regional scales◦ Reasonable to “draw” abstract characterizations

of areas (i.e. residential vs. industrial) City scale

◦ Several forms of “picking” from uniform tessellations or other pre-defined areas

At regional scales and above◦ Unreasonable to “draw” or “pick”◦ More practical to “simulate”

Relationships between Spatial Scale and Methods

Page 10: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

◦ Original idea embedded in “ArcSketch”, now in ESRI GeoPlanner

Avoids creating raw geometry, then adding attributes, then computing characteristics

Workflow starts by picking rich symbol, which sets object/class characteristics

◦ This concept is *not* proprietary, and many web tools, for example, would benefit from adopting it

Geosemantic Sketching

Page 11: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

By Sketch From External Plans / Buildout Simulated

◦ At Plan Level (agglomerations of built forms)◦ At Building/Parcel Level (simulating siting)

Treatment of Urban Growth

Page 12: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Interesting Historical Tools◦ Analog map overlay◦ TR55 & USLE – Woodlands, Tx◦ CityGreen – Ecosystem Services Evaluation

Mature Digital Tools◦ CommunityViz™◦ Criterion Planners INDEX◦ NatureServe Vista

Cutting/Bleeding Edge◦ Research Prototypes

By Chronology

Page 13: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Impact Simulators with Parameter/Scenarios Input◦ General-purpose◦ Special purpose

Impact Simulation with Implicit-geography◦ CAD with orthophoto underlay

Sketch tools with semantics but not evaluation◦ ArcSketch

Generative design tools◦ CityEngine, etc.

Taxonomy

Page 14: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

CommunityViz™

Page 15: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

INDEX / Sparc

Page 16: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

NatureServe Vista™

Page 17: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

Envision Tomorrow (Fregonese and Associates)

Page 18: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

RapidFire / Urban Footprint (Calthorpe – Open Source)

Page 19: A Tour of  Geodesign  Methods and Tools

All the cool kids are doing it (geodesign)

Initial challenge was “tight coupling”◦ Response was integrated applications

New challenge is “interoperability”◦ First, to open world of indicators/evaluations◦ Second, to allow widespread public engagement

Conclusions