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A Larger Tent for Geodesign

Keynote speaker Noel Cressie, distinguished professor at the University of Wollongong in Australia.
Keynote speaker Noel Cressie, distinguished professor at the University of Wollongong in Australia.

“Geodesign is both an ancient idea and a new idea supported by new and advancing technology,” said Esri president Jack Dangermond, as he welcomed more than 300 people from around the world to the 2015 Geodesign Summit in Redlands, California. “I see GIS integrating into almost anything we do.”

Geodesign combines the art of design with the science of geospatial technologies—such as GIS—to find smart and sustainable design solutions. Most often these solutions have focused on landscape architecture, urban planning, and environmental conservation, but the geodesign tent is getting bigger. Geodesign is also being increasingly embraced, albeit on a smaller scale, as an approach to economic development, urban transportation, and even gaming. And geodesign is increasingly being done in 3D.

The summit, which was held January 22–23, is in its sixth year. It was obvious from the breadth of topics covered in the presentations and Lightning Talks that modern geodesign concepts, practices, technologies, and education are maturing quickly. Geodesign in 3D also had a big wow factor. Keynote speaker Noel Cressie, distinguished professor at the University of Wollongong in Australia, also added spatiotemporal statistics and the importance of conditional probabilities to the geodesign equation.

Game for Geodesign?

Gamers (and the parents of gamers) in the audience were intrigued by Ulf Månsson’s presentation that showed how geodesign was integrated into the popular video game Minecraft.

Ulf Månsson, a senior project manager for Sweco, created a method for incorporating geospatial data into the Minecraft game.
Ulf Månsson, a senior project manager for Sweco, created a method for incorporating geospatial data into the Minecraft game.

Månsson, a senior project manager for the Swedish sustainable engineering and design firm Sweco, was a gamer as a youth. His son and his friends now build things together in Minecraft. They create 3D virtual worlds. Inspired by seeing his son doing what was essentially the same design work he does at the office, Månsson created a method to stream geospatial data into the Minecraft server.

Assisted by his Sweco colleagues, Månsson used GIS tools to build the land data that would form part of the foundation for Blockholm, a replica of Stockholm, Sweden, that would be added to Minecraft. They used Esri’s ArcGIS Data Interoperability, an extension for ArcGIS for Desktop, to process real spatial data, such as topography, waterways, roads, and property information, and generate it in 3D.

Blockholm, a project conceived by the Swedish Centre for Architecture and Design, essentially married geo and design in a virtual world. More than 10,000 Minecraft players later used its roadways, water features, and property information as a foundation to rebuild Stockholm as they envisioned it.

Because the ArcGIS Data Interoperability extension now natively supports Minecraft formats, the data can also be read back. “So if you set up a project like this where you invite players to rebuild a world, you can compare (worlds) before and after and just take out the pieces that have changed and bring them back to a GIS system such as CityEngine,” Månsson said. “You could go from a CityEngine model to Minecraft, have it edited there, and then bring those edits back to CityEngine.”

Joseph Minicozzi, architect, urban designer, and principal of the econometric consulting firm Urban3, gave a featured presentation, maps tax revenue in 3D.
Joseph Minicozzi, architect, urban designer, and principal of the econometric consulting firm Urban3, gave a featured presentation, maps tax revenue in 3D.

Geodesign of Land-Use Patterns

Joseph Minicozzi, architect, urban designer, and principal of the econometric consulting firm Urban3 in Ashville, North Carolina, gave a featured presentation. He uses geodesign to show officials and citizens how downtown areas in cities can be economically vital and viable as compared to strip malls.

“What is a city? For me, a city is a finite boundary of land that has to be managed,” said Minicozzi. “It is essentially a farm that grows a crop of buildings. There is a cash flow behind all of that. My task here is to explain that cash flow.”

In ArcScene viewer, an application that is part of the ArcGIS 3D Analyst extension, Minicozzi’s maps showed the taxable value per acre of land as elevations. He showed a map of Travis County, Texas. The highest extrusion was located in downtown Austin, the county seat. Another map showed a high spike for alcohol sales in downtown versus the mall areas in the suburbs.

He mapped other tax data for Travis County, including mixed beverage and food sales per acre. “You see downtown popping off the map,” Minicozzi said. The maps starkly illustrate how buildings downtown can often generate much more property tax and city retail tax revenue than suburban strip malls.

Minicozzi recalled hearing Dangermond once say, “If you put it on a map, people get it quickly.” That made an impression. “We’ve seen this time and time again; when we make these three-dimensional models of the taxes, people get it,” said Minicozzi.

In one demo of CityEngine, the Complete Streets sample was used to quickly generate visualizations of bike lanes, curbs, and trees in 3D.
In one demo of CityEngine, the Complete Streets sample was used to quickly generate visualizations of bike lanes, curbs, and trees in 3D.

Later he handed out stickers to the audience with cards displaying an image. One was of Count von Count from the children’s television show Sesame Street, with the catchphrase “Do the Math.” The other was Dangermond with the slogan “Do the Map.” The audience chuckled, but the value of the message was obvious.

Creating the Future

The Geodesign Summit emphasized smart growth, sustainability, and habitat protection, underscored by an interesting and thought-provoking lineup of speakers that included David Early from PlaceWorks, Colby M. Brown from Citilabs, Zach Ferdaña from The Nature Conservancy, David Rouse from American Planning Association, and Mark Reiner from Non Sequitur.

Dangermond emphasized the importance of geodesign from the standpoint of sustainability. He related that he and botanist Peter Raven had joined Paul R. Ehrlich, author of The Population Bomb, to speak to a gathering of the California Native Plants Association. “It was a thrilling conference with thousands of people who were biophiliacs interested in plants and living things,” Dangermond said.

Ehrlich told the audience that there was only about a 10 percent chance that in 100 years humanity would still go on. “This was very controversial to this audience,” said Dangermond, adding that Raven disagreed with Ehrlich—claiming it would only be a 1 percent chance.

This is where geodesign, supported by geographic science and technologies such as GIS, helps decision makers create smarter communities and a more sustainable earth. Dangermond said that attendees were here to “talk about how we create the future rather than be at the (mercy) of the future.”

Geodesign Technologies Demonstrated

As Dangermond noted during the summit, Esri has worked hard to develop new and nimble geodesign tools including GeoPlanner for ArcGIS, the ArcGIS Pro application in ArcGIS for Desktop, and Esri CityEngine.

Esri’s Rob Matthews demonstrated GeoPlanner for ArcGIS. He used the app’s tools to create a hypothetical Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route through downtown San Diego, California, leveraging a geodesign approach. Next he used the tools in the app to study planning issues at multiple scales, from a city-wide BRT routing to the fine-grained placement of stations and the evaluation of land-use regulations to support Transit Oriented Development (TOD) at the site scale.

A demo of GeoPlanner for ArcGIS showed how a hypothetical Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route could be created through downtown San Diego, California, leveraging a geodesign approach.
A demo of GeoPlanner for ArcGIS showed how a hypothetical Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route could be created through downtown San Diego, California, leveraging a geodesign approach.

GeoPlanner for ArcGIS provides web-based tools for sketching alternative development scenarios while getting real-time feedback on the suitability of the design when measured against important planning metrics such as proximity to existing transit, parks, jobs, and households.

He also demonstrated the app’s capability to do live analysis in the cloud, such as walk times from proposed BRT stations, enriching design schemes with curated demographic data, and suitability for BRT station placement using a weighted raster overlay service.

Matthews then demonstrated how the app can be used to compare project alternatives using a dashboard for key performance indicators. Finally, he prepared a higher density development option to export to ArcGIS Pro for further refinement in 3D.

In his demo, Esri’s Nathan Shephard used ArcGIS Pro to take this downtown San Diego design to a larger scale. Existing 3D buildings (courtesy of Pictometry) provided context around potential building development sites.

A proposed building outline was digitized in 2D using precision editing tools. A synchronized 3D view rendered the simple shape as a constructed 3D building—complete with realistic texturing.

A simple spatial query identified which buildings would impact existing underground water mains. The results of previously run solar and wind analyses were explored to see if the design would create areas that could cause heat islands. A few such areas, which had high solar radiation and low wind speed, were identified. Rather than use ArcGIS Pro interactively to place individual trees to reduce the heat, Shephard said the problem was better attacked parametrically, as part of the street design process.

Shephard then turned the demo over to his colleague Brooks Patrick, who demonstrated the 3D capabilities in Esri CityEngine. CityEngine supports rapid design iterations, giving users the tools and rules to create a city, neighborhood, or even a street.

“This is made possible with CityEngine’s procedural 3D modeling. If efficiency is important to your 3D pipeline, then you are really going to like this,” Patrick said.

Using data from Shephard’s downtown San Diego demonstration, Patrick showed the audience Complete Streets, a procedural street example that incorporates knowledge and ideas from transportation planning guidelines and standards. He used it to generate a default street, then added 2.5-meter-wide bike lanes with 1.2 meter buffers for each lane and planters, curbs, and trees. Not only can Complete Streets be used to visualize the bike lanes, curbs, and trees in 3D, it can also generate analytical reports on various aspects of the street’s geometry, which is useful in coming up with rough cost estimates for construction work.

“Planning our environment carefully—leveraging GIS, 3D, and the best possible design practices—will be critical for building a sustainable future,” said Esri’s Eric Wittner.

Make plans early for next year’s Geodesign Summit, which will be held in January 27–28, 2016. Workshops and educational meetings will be held January 25–26. Check in regularly at geodesignsummit.com or contact geodesignsummit@esri.com. And be sure to follow happenings on Twitter at @geodesignsummit.

About the author

Carla Wheeler is a former technology writer and editor at Esri and a former newspaper journalist. She graduated from the University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism and political science. She was the previous editor of ArcWatch and worked with ArcGIS StoryMaps apps. Follow her on Twitter @gisjourno.