Chronicles of mapping a Canadian village
Поставио корисник Creator13 у 26 Септембар 2020 на English.A few years ago, Esri got their hands on amazing, high-res imagery of a few urban areas in the province of New Brunswick, Canada. I found this out through the Canadian tasking manager when I was a newbie looking for ways to contribute. I can only say that I stumbled upon a gold mine. Way back in 2017, I contributed to the cities of Edmundston and Moncton. When I came back this year, there was not much work left to be done in those areas and I moved on to a new project: the towns of Bathurst and Beresford. I started back in May when I was looking for some distraction during the lockdown and I picked it back up at the start of September because I was looking for some distraction from college work. I decided it would be nice to share what I’ve been up to there with the community so here it goes!
The goal
The aim of the Tasking Manager project was to just map all the buildings. Because, well, there were none at all. As I started working though, I noticed there was much more that needed to be done than just adding some buildings. Most of these areas have never been properly mapped.
CanVec
Large parts of the Canadian map have been imported from CanVec, a vector map provided by the Canadian Natural Resources organization. In the area of Beresford, the import happened back in 2012. That’s already eight years ago. And the quality of the data wasn’t particularly great. Roads are inaccurate, forests cover half the urban areas, bridges aren’t actually placed over the water, you name it.
Mapping the town
Since the imagery that Esri offers is so good, I decided I’d do more than simply add the buildings. I have been mapping as much of this town as I possibly could. That includes the buildings of course, but also the landuses, the roads, paths, forest tracks, beaches, and even power lines. I’m taking it in small steps, usually two or three changesets of about 1500 edits per day.