openstreetmap for resilience, response and recovery
DESCRIPTION
OpenStreetMap for Resilience, Response and Recovery presentation given at the World Bank in Manila as part of a workshop entitled: Participatory Mapping with OpenStreetMap for Disaster Resilience , and Community based Recovery and Reconstruction PlanningTRANSCRIPT
OpenStreetMap for Resilience, Response and
Recovery Kate Chapman/@wonderchook
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
OpenStreetMap “The Wikipedia of Maps”
OpenStreetMap.org
Most maps that you think of as free have legal or technical restricFons.
The “open” in OpenStreetMap means the data is free for anyone to use, remix and redistribute
In exchange you must credit OpenStreetMap
and share improvements back for everyone
We use the principles of open source and open geographic data for humanitarian response and economic development
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
OpenStreetMap and Contributors CC-‐BY-‐SA
West Nusa Tenggara
The Idea
Map every building and infrastructure once, then everyone can use the data for their own purposes. (Poverty Mapping,
Tourism, Urban Planning, Disaster Planning)
What Happened?
Provincial Government, Local NGOs, UniversiFes, Private Companies signed agreement to support mapping to make West Nusa Tenggara the best mapped
province in Indonesia
Map Once, Everyone Benefits
Mapping Jakarta Plan
• 267 Urban Village (Kelurahans) • Invite the head of each urban village and another person to come map infrastructure
• 70 University students to help input the data • Return a printed map back to each village
River Length : + 343, 6 km Across 5 Districts : Ngawi, Bojonegoro, Tuban, Lamongan, Gresik Across + 198 Villages Last Flood : April 13, 2013
DocumentaFon…… (Ngawi, Bojonegoro, Tuban, Lamongan, Gresik)
November 7th
• OpenStreetMap mappers started to map Tacloban city.
• Aber 24 hours, 10,000 buildings (about 25% of the buildings in this city) were tagged
• The work of 33 OSM mappers