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Building a Great City – Together
IT Best Practises - Enabling City Services from the Ground UP
Bob Gaspirc, Manager GCC
Problems cannot be solved at the same level of awareness that created them.
What makes a great City?
• a great city is one that is known around the world for the quality of life it offers its citizens.
• It’s safe, strong, creative and clean.
• It has a great transit system.
• And leaves no one behind by creating opportunity for all.
Toronto is home to 2.7m people
Toronto is a place of work
Toronto:A place to play
A place to learn and grow
A place of inspiration to
many
Toronto is a major centre of economic growth and
opportunity for Ontario and Canada
Toronto is... Diverse and Multicultural
2006–2007Mathieu Da Costa Challenge
Winning Artwork - Ages 9–12
Lindsay YatesTitle: Seeing Canada
Regal Road - Public SchoolToronto, Ontario
11
• Our population continues to grow
• 2.6 million more people will move to Toronto by 2021
12
Who will need 1.6 million more jobs . And
13… 1.25 million more homes
By 2021 we will need 19 additional lanes of expressway capacity to move suburban commuters to jobs in the City and City residents to jobs in the 905 region which cannot be effectively served by public transit.
15
From a simplistic point of view
Uncontrolled growth may ...
• Lead to more air pollution
• Limit our ability to attract new business
16
Globalization and new telecommunication technologies mean ...
17
…can flow into the City … or flow out of it.
We need to grow,we need to grow smarter
Toronto is a caring and friendly cityToronto is a safe, clean, green and sustainable city
Toronto is a dynamic city
Toronto invests in quality of life
What do we want ?
20
•2011
•6th largest government in Canada
• $11 Billion gross capital/operating budget
•53,000 employed
We Live in a Changing World
Scope of Municipal Services
many services provided round-the-clock Solid waste collection, processing and
recycling Water and wastewater services Emergency services
Policing Fire EMS
Goods and people movement: Transit Roads Sidewalks
Economic development Libraries, parks and recreation Court services Arts, culture and heritage
Tourism promotion Planning and development Building permits Licensing Bylaw enforcement and
inspections Social and health services
Social assistance Homes for aged Child care Hostels Social housing Public health Community support
I&T Opportunities and Challenges
• City growth and need for I&T services is greater than capacity to supply services
• Financial constraints on IT investment may hinder ability to be a catalyst for change and improved service delivery
23
Challenges and Opportunities
Business
Services
Processes
Tools Organization
Business needs drive service portfolios
Services drive process design
Processes drive tool selection
Process drive organizational design
IT Service Management
Agenda
What is IT Service Management/ITIL?Continual Service Improvement ProcessITSM/ITIL Status at the City of TorontoQ & A
25
What is ITSM? IT Service Management
A best practise set of specialized organizational capabilities for providing value to customers in the form of services. IT Service Management takes the form of a set of functions and processes for managing services over their lifecycle.
26
27
ITIL is an approach to ITSM
• Service StrategyDesign, develop, implement service management
• Service DesignDesign and develop services and service mgt. processes
• Service TransitionTransition new and changed services into operations
• Service OperationManage IT Service delivery and support
• Continual Service ImprovementCreate and maintain business value through
better service design, transition and operations
Describes the organisation of IT resources to deliver business value, and documents processes, functions
and roles in IT Service Management
ITIL creates a continual feedback loop
30
and … processes across The ITIL Service Lifecycle
Service StrategyService Strategy
Service DesignService Design
Service TransitionService Transition
Service OperationService Operation
Continual Service ImprovementContinual Service Improvement
Requirements
How service is deployed
Which services?
Operational requirements
How service is delivered
How service is supported
Metrics
Requests for Change
What does it look like?
ITIL® is a Registered Trade Mark of the UK Office of Government Commerce31
What is CSI?
CSI focuses on maintaining value for customers through the continual evaluation and improvement of the quality of services and the overall maturity of the ITSM service lifecycle and underlying processes.
32
What is CSI?
The primary purpose of CSI is to continually align and realign IT services to the changing business needs by identifying and implementing improvements to IT services that support business processes.
33
Continual Service ImprovementPlan, design, develop, deploy CSI Process:
– Generate and manage process metrics– Formalize Process Maturity
Assessments– Conduct Process Compliance Audits– Implement Process defect tracking and
enhancement repository and procedures
34
CSI Toronto
• Output of each CSI recommendation is input to the IT Process Improvement Mgmt Function
35
Critical Success Factors
Senior Management supportAlignment with the clientAlignment to strategic objectivesRealistic improvement cycleStakeholder participationMeasurementAwareness campaignFeedback repositoryKotter’s 8-step Change Model
36
Kotter’s 8-step Change Model
37
I&T Division
38
Vision
To partner with City Programs to deliver excellent services and ensure
Toronto’s financial sustainability
MissionTo provide quality and responsive shared services
through strategic and innovative leadership
Integrated Spatially Enabled Workflows
E-City Vision – Local Government Anywhere Any Time for Everyone
E-Foundation
E-BusinessE-Government
E-ServiceE-Public
GeospatialEnvironment
I&T Division Services
40
Program
Services
Activities
Geospatial Information Value Chain
Geospatial Competency Centre
41
Common Spatial Data
Improved data management
Time saved used to prepare more data
Greater data availability (internally)
Get more for same money
Better data quality
Improved decision making
ISO19115 Metadata
Facilitates data dissemination via
the web
Better service for the public
Greater data availability (externally)
Costs less than face-to-
face or telephone
Replace client applications which use local data
Redundant image file
server
Get more for same money
Ability to provide new functionality e.g. routing
Better service for the public
and staff
Open-standards approach facilitates
data sharing
Better service for business
partners
Benefits Model
Geospatial Transformation Process Framework
Review Plan Act Measure Review
Transformation Focus Areas
Geospatial GovernanceB
usiness Model
How
geosp
atial service delivery
is organized
Product and S
ervice Portfolio
Land b
ase d
ata. D
ata Integration
. D
ata p
roducts and tools. B
usiness solutions.
Clients and P
artnersInternal and external org
anizations interacting w
ith GC
C
Data and A
pplicationsD
ata re
positories. D
ata main
tenance.
Technologie
s. To
ols.
GC
C O
rganizationB
usiness fu
nctions. R
oles. S
kills and skill g
aps. Positions. R
eporting
relation
ships O
rganizational structure.
Service D
elivery Processes
Trends. M
odels & describes. H
ow
service delivery will be sequen
ced
and carrie
d out.
Infrastructure Com
ponentS
ervers, networks
Regulatory
Policie
s. Standard
s. SLA
/OLA
GCC Mandate
Provide centre of excellence for geospatial data, technology, and consulting
Separate geospatial services from lines of business Serve as first point of contact for geospatial services Maintain foundation geography (land base) data Coordinate policy, standards, and methodologies for
applications development Coordinate access to geospatial data and technologies Ensure alignment with enterprise frameworks Promote and share experiences Monitor and track business solution requirements Develop and sustain solutions Collaborate with stakeholders and business partners
Geospatial Governance Committee – Mandate1. Provide leadership and strategic direction for alignment of geospatial data and
technology with the City’s strategic goals and objectives
2. Approve geospatial related policies, standards and guidelines;
3. Approve direction into the geospatial data content management strategy
4. Review and approve geospatial initiatives and projects for inclusion to Geospatial Integrated Work Plan for the City
5. Direct changes to the current year Geospatial Integrated Work Plan to accommodate extraordinary requests or other urgent matters
6. Evaluate, prioritize and recommend geospatial initiatives and projects through the EARP to the BAP
7. Discuss and resolve non-compliance issues in regard with geospatial data collection, maintenance, integration and applications development
8. Champion innovation for new and emerging geospatial and other technologies
9. Foster geospatial enabled organization through the establishment of two-way communication channels for information sharing, education and identification of best practices
SLA/OLA
Geospatial services are included in Service Level Agreements between I&T and other divisions
Accountability for core Geospatial Data Sets
• GCC – acquire, maintain, change
• One Address Repository (OAR)• Toronto Centreline (TCL)• Cadastral Database• Topographic database• Space-borne, aerial, and terrestrial imagery/ortho-imagery and its by-products• Digital Elevation Model (DEM)• Digital Terrain Model (DTM) • Triangulated Irregular Networks (TIM)• Contour generation as a service• Geospatially enabling linkage mechanism for business data
• Survey & Utility Mapping Services – acquire, maintain, change
• Control survey data• Street Naming and municipal numbers • Underground utility networks
Accessible, timely relevant, accurate data
• Authenticated and tagged data• Content• Coverage• Completeness• Currency• Spatial Accuracy• Works with my application
51
Data Content - Operational Information/Needs
– Business data linked to Addresses, Segments, Intersections, Administrative Areas, Parcels, topo features, imagery
– Secured and under the stewardship of the Business Unit.
– Stored on Geospatial or Business Server
– Linkage allows Business Units to spatially analyse, strategically plan, operationally plan and financially analyse services, products, and operations.
52
Near Future Directions (2 years) Access
Improve Mapping experience
Expand Open Data
Geospatial Information
Integrate topographic mapping
Improve visualization
Accept location based information from hand held devices
Conform to Enterprise Architecture
Enterprise service bus technology
Geospatial Software
More re-usable tools
53
Land
Structure Entrance or Land Entrance
Structure
Data Content - One Address Repository (OAR)
23
18A18
20
• ½ million Authorized Municipal Address Numbers, all unique ids, under daily maintenance – GCC MS• Edit tool – GCC GS• Full history and lineage• Classified (Land, Structure, Structure Entrance, Land Entrance) feature coded as to general use• Address Family • Positioned within parcel/structure• Linked to Centreline, derives street name• Stage is Reserved prior to plan registration/deposition, Regular after plan registration/deposition• TBI: Business status records current status as planned, approved, demolished, foundations underway, ready for occupancy, occupied, …
54
Data Content - Transportation Centreline
• ~ 50,000 segments, ~ 35,000 intersections, unique IDs, under daily maintenance – GCC-MS• Edit tool – GCC GS• Includes road, highway, ramp, river, railway, hydro line, trail, pathway, laneway• Full history and lineage• Feature coded according to Transportation (arterial, local, …)• Authorized names, operational in absence of authorized • Address ranges derived from OAR• One-way, overpass/underpass, restricted turn and time limited turn Maintenance triggered from by-laws GCC-GS• TBI: Business status according to planned, constructed, dedicated, assumed, …
Derived Address Ranges
55
Data Content – Cadastral Plans, Parcels, Easements
• 700,000 parcels – Survey accuracy, unique ids, under daily maintenance – GCC-MS
• Parcels – Municipal (corridor, condo, standard), Tax• Easements• Plans – Subdivision, Reference, … • UD: History and lineage• Maintenance is tightly tied to business processes in the City, in MPAC and in Land Registry/Titles
56
Forestry Regions
Data Content - Administrative Areas
• ~200 (growing as needed) Administrative Areas – integrated with Centreline, OAR and Parcels• Generally loaded as needed/requested by BUs. Sometimes created by GCC-GS on behalf of Bus. Load Tool – GCC-
GS• Each with dedicated business steward, e.g.
– Elections for Voting Subdivisions, Voting locations – online editing by Election Services Edit Tool – GCC-GS– Parks, Forestry & Recreation for Forestry Regions – Toronto Police Services for Police Zones– Solid Waste Management for Solid Waste Management District …
• Each immediately associated with associated addresses, streets and parcels
City Wards Police Zones
57
Data Content - Background Layers – loaded as
available • GTA Centreline from MOH
• 75,000 street segments, names & address ranges (equivalent of 3.1 million addresses) covering Burlington to Clarington to Brock in the north TBI: extension to cover Windsor, to Kingston to Kawarthas & Muskokas in north
• Imagery• Currencies include 1999 50cm color, 2002 20cm color, 2003 7.5cm BW, 2005 20cm color, TBI 2009 20cm color
• Topographic Mapping• Curbs, buildings, fences, trees, pools, … Maintained by GCC-MS
• Utility Mapping• Toronto Water & Sewer Maintained by TW, Edit Tool - TW
58
Data Content - Operational Information/Needs
• Operational Information– Linked to Addresses, Segments, Intersections, Administrative Areas, Parcels– Secured and under the stewardship of the Business Unit.– Stored on Geospatial or Business Server– Linkage allows Business Units to spatially analyse, strategically plan, operationally plan and financially
analyse operations.– Linkage Tools – GCC-GS
• Operational Needs– Feed, Link, Display, Analyze operational information
TaxAssessment
Postal Code
Parking Tags – Handheld
Work Orders Sidewalk CracksTraffic Counts
Health Visits
Street Furniture
Solid Waste Demand
Solid Waste Routes
Traffic Lights
Road SaltTraffic Restrictions
Traffic Flow Pedestrian Crossings
311 Service Requests211 Services
59
IGE Data Repository
• Maintenance Repository & Viewing/Access Repository – Transaction based ETL
• Security – As appropriate & Oracle role based
Maintenance
• Normalized for integrity
• Business hours
• No failover
• Tuned for maintenance
• MTM NAD27
View for Access
• Denormalized for ease of use
• 24/7 Accessibility• Implemented for 311, available to all
• Failover
• Isolation
• Highly tuned for Viewing/access Performance
• Oracle Spatial with ESRI SDE, MapInfo, … access
• Multiple Coordinate Systems• WGS84 for Web mapping and interchange• MTM NAD27 for maintenance & other City use
• Enterprise Applications• 311, TMMS, Hansen, RACS, IBMS
ETLGCC-GS
60
Data Maintenance Solutions • Steward – clearly defined business roles
• Defined Business processes
• Source – authorization for changes
• Work flow of tasks – controlled activities, steward driven
• Transaction – long transaction management
• Multi-user editing – version and conflict management
• History & Lineage maintained
• Validation and audit – transaction and database level
• Distributed Maintenance encouraged
• Software version control (CVS)
• Problem/issue tracking (iTracker)
• Multiple environments– Development, integration testing, QA, user acceptance testing, staging, production (CM)
• Application Design – five tiered component architecture – Web based– Presentation – Web Interface, ArcGIS server ADF, my faces, JSP, …– Application – Java manager classes - Reusable– Services – ArcGIS server and server objects, SDE (Spatial Database Engine) - Shared– Business – Oracle stored packages - Reusable– Data – Oracle database objects
• Application Security– LDAP authentication– Application authorization
• iMaint (OAR & TCL)• ArcGIS Server 9.2
• iRealigner (Voting Subdivisions)• ArcGIS Server 9.2
• Cedit Cadastral Plan/Parcel UD• ArcGIS Server 9.4 (10)
• iBiz (Operational Info)• Oracle 10G, ArcIMS 9.3.1
61
Data Access Solutions
• Security – if necessary
• Version control, Problem Tracking, Multiple environments and tiered application design as per Maintenance Solutions
• Intuitive and comprehensive
• Fast development (reusable components, generic solutions built for one used by many)
• Utilize existing Services and components, also used in Maintenance solutions
• Dynamic access to external data feeds – XML data services
• Tools/Services include location search, identify, tabular display and geometry service to project MTM NAD27 to Web Mercator
• Support both divisional needs and public needs– Complex versus simple– Intranet versus internet– Secure versus open
• iMapIt uses shared environment and services, is configurable, avoids multiple/overlapping developments
• Configurations are database driven, programmatic failover, load balancing and isolation
• Road Restrictions – prototype of next generation:– Map with cartographic appearance– Cached Maps for performance - updated according to maintenance Transaction activities – near real time– XML feeds
• UD iMapIt v2– Similar to Road Restrictions for look and feel. Configurable and additional functionality – Tools/Services such as closest services within a distance of a location, closest intersection to an event, all events within an Area of Interest, mailing lists
• iMapIt v1 in production: 200 configurations e.g. iView, TOMaps, ORHighways, Zoning public consultations, 211,311, Elections
• ArcIMS 9.0, JSF
• Road Restrictions• ArcGIS 9.3.1, Dojo, Javascipt, Ajax, REST
• UD iMapit v2 – October/November availability• As Road Restrictions
62
Configurable Web Access - iMapIt v1 & v2
63
WebServerIBM HTTP Server
Application ServerWebSphere AS
Map/GIS ServerArcIMS, ArcGIS
Geospatial Maintenance Server Oracle/ArcSDE (SDO & SDE binary)Geodatabase
IGE Maintenance
Distributed Maintenance StewardsIntranet/Internet
Browser
iMaint (TCL/OAR) iRealigner (Elections)
Cedit (Cadastral Plan/Parcel)iBiz(information linkage)
Infrastructure Architecture - Production IGE Maintenance
Logic
Presentation
Business
Data
SAN ETL
64
Infrastructure Architecture - Data Warehouse Staff /External Partner/Citizen Access Intranet/Internet Browser
Emergency Medical Services
Staff & External Partner AccessDesktop
Toronto Water Hansen
Transportation TMMS/RACS
Social Services
Planning
Economic Development & Culture
Toronto Police
Fire
Traffic Centre
311
Revenue Services
Public Health
Parks, Forestry & Recreation
Solid Waste
Logic
WebServerIBM HTTP Server
Application ServerWebSphere AS(Java applications & EJBs Servlet Connectors, &Web Services & OGC Web Map Services)
Map/GIS ServerArcIMS/ArcGIS
(ESRI Map Services, Geo Services)
Enterprise Spatial Data ServerOracle/SDESDO & SDE binaryOracle Procedures
Presentation
Business
Data
IGE Data Warehouse SANETL
Web Apps
WSDL/REST/SOAP Services
ESRI Map Services
OGC Web Map Services EJBs
DBLinks for Data
Stored Procs
…
211
65
Enterprise View • Use Standard Address Validation & Location
• Consistent citizen experience
• Accurate Address, Place Name & Intersection validation and location
• Seamless Address locate with associated Administrative Areas (as soon as loaded)
• Immediate locate of newly assigned addresses & newly created intersections
• Consistent Oracle Procedure for validate and locate at heart of EJB & WSDL, REST & SOAP
•Avoid extract and load of data • Currency – out of date as soon as extracted – creates liability issues
• Complexity of transaction/incremental based loads
• Resource impact of “replace” loads
• Creating replicated datasets is against EA principles
• Leverage IGE for Data access• Fully sustained, accessible 24/7
• Conforms to City EA standards
• Leverage existing Solutions/Services• Fully sustained
• Conforms to Enterprise Solution Architecture standards
• Avoid software/tool replication according to EA principals
• Developed with usability, flexibility and resuability in mind
• Be a Player• Report any E&Os. More eyes, the better it gets for all
66
Data Maintenance Solutions • Business processes identified• Steward – clearly defined business roles
• Source – authorization for changes
• Work flow of tasks – controlled activities, steward driven
• Transaction – long transaction management
• Multi-user editing – version and conflict management
• History & Lineage maintained
• Validation and audit – transaction and database level
• Distributed Maintenance encouraged
• Software version control (CVS)
• Problem/issue tracking (iTracker)
• Multiple environments– Development, integration testing, QA, user acceptance testing, staging, production (CM)
• Application Design – five tiered component architecture – Web based– Presentation – Web Interface, ArcGIS server ADF, my faces, JSP, …– Application – Java manager classes - Reusable– Services – ArcGIS server and server objects, SDE (Spatial Database Engine) - Shared– Business – Oracle stored packages - Reusable– Data – Oracle database objects
• Application Security– LDAP authentication– Application authorization
67
IGE Data Repository
• Maintenance Repository & Viewing/Access Repository – Transaction based ETL
• Security – As appropriate & Oracle role based
Maintenance
• Normalized for integrity
• Business hours
• No failover
• Tuned for maintenance
• MTM NAD27
View for Access
• Denormalized for ease of use
• 24/7 Accessibility• Implemented for 311, available to all
• Failover
• Isolation
• Highly tuned for Viewing/access Performance
• Oracle Spatial with ESRI SDE, MapInfo, … access
• Multiple Coordinate Systems• WGS84 for Web mapping and interchange• MTM NAD27 for maintenance & other City use
• Enterprise Applications• 311, TMMS, Hansen, RACS, IBMS
ETLGCC-GS
68
2010 ACTIVITIES
GEO DATABASE
DB WEB
IGE DATA
ACCESS SOLUTIONS
MAINTENANCE SOLUTIONS
Cadastral Editor
iArea
iMapIt Plus
iMaint
iRealinger
iBizMetadata
Bulk Load
iTag
PEDIT
Audit
Train
Document
Migrate (Hardware & Software)
24/7
Test
Deploy
Consult/Present/Exhibit
GPA
ArcGIS-Share
Elections
Zoning
311
Bill Boards
Cycling
Heritage
TPH - HE
Toronto Water
Real Estate
911
211
Metadata
iRoutIt
Locator
iMapIt
iAssess
Export
Geocoding
Legacy
Links to Enterprise Applications
igeView
igeMAigeMaint
igeDM
Geospatial Competency Centre
69
Topographic Database Maintenance Program
Mapping for the Challenges of Today
What data needs to be collected to support the delivery of public services
We need spatially enabled technologies to document events in our Natural and Built Environment
WHAT IS TOPOGRAPHIC MAPPING ?
• A map “view” that represents the horizontal and vertical positions of features
• Distinguished from planimetric by the addition of relief & contours
• 3D mapping introduces the concept of 3D planimetric
How do we model topo features?9 levels of abstraction
73
The OpenGIS® Abstract Specification
Final product
• Timely, relevant, and accurate data needed for your business purposes.
• Accuracy: Truth in advertising
• Content, coverage, completeness, spatial, temporal
• Metadata - (series, layer, feature)
Geospatial Competency Centre
74
What can we see
Geospatial Competency Centre
75
What do we need to map? What band, what time of year
Geospatial Competency Centre
76
Shape, size, shadow, colour, leaf on or off
Spectral reflectance curves show:
Visible wave length – green difference not distinguishable
BW Near IR 0.8 µm wavelength ideal
Band or channel selection
Geospatial Competency Centre
77
We need 3D views
Pictometry Canada Oblique Imagery
What do you need to see RESOLUTION
• Feature/Object identification• shape, size, height, XYZ, elevation• Typical Use or Display scale• Ground pixel distance
• Variable display scale– Actual shape
– Cell, symbolization
– Generalization
– Skeletonization
– Cartographic off set
How does it need to be modelled
Geospatial Competency Centre
80
81
Data Life Cycle Map
general Feature Update
NotificationForms
tables
Specific FeatureUpdateBy area
User Data Entry
Temp DB/Other
Business CentricFeatureUpdate
Spring, summer, fall, winterBW, Colour, IR, multi-bandGSDAerial, satellite, LiDAROther sources
Query Markers CWP Permits
Business transaction Catchbasins, park features Above ground As-builtsFlush, replace
Data Collection Repositories DisseminationProcesses
Imagery
Soft copy photogrammetryESM
tables
Usertables
DSM/DEM/DTM
ImageryLibrary
Topo-dbFeaturesObjectsAttributes
feature recognition edge detection Line following manual
Main components of softcopy photogrammetry
• Data requirements defined, area and type of coverge determined• Ground sample distance is defined• Plan mission and ground control• Aerial photography• Aerial triangulation• Generate Stereo pairs• Generate DSM/DEM/DTM/TIN• Generate Orthos• Feature Mapping• Update feature
Geospatial Competency Centre
83
Photography is a process that converts the real 3D world into
flat 2D images
Geospatial Competency Centre
84
Photogrammetry reverses the process
Geospatial Competency Centre
85
Project Limits 2km and 3 km buffer
At least one principle centre between 2/3km
Imagery clipped to 2km buffer
Plan mission, get approvals
Geospatial Competency Centre87
Collect the imagery
Geospatial Competency Centre 88
Lines/images captured as per RFP/RFQ
Complete aerial triangulation
Geospatial Competency Centre
90
Geospatial Competency Centre
91
Generate stereo pair
Geospatial Competency Centre
92
Sample Data - Control Network
Use Enterprise stereoscopic Model
Geospatial Competency Centre
93
STEREOSCOPIC MODELNeat Model Index
• Complete coverage• 1800 – image pairs• 1:6,000 Scale images• 920 km of flight lines• 6-15 cm resolution• 3000 control points• 250 GB per series
• Visual reality in 3D
Collect, maintain and ground truth features
Geospatial Competency Centre
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Geospatial Competency Centre
96
Generate DEM ...
97
Digital Terrain Model
X, Y, Z terrain coordinatesDensity &breaklinesdwg, dgn and ASCII formatsSource of TINs
Geospatial Competency Centre
98
Triangulated Irregular Network
Establishes the mathematical relationshipGenerate models, surfaces, drapes and renders
Geospatial Competency Centre
99
With Aerial Image
Geospatial Competency Centre
100
Feature collection 2D View
Geospatial Competency Centre
101
Feature Collection 3D-View
Geospatial Competency Centre
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Geospatial Competency Centre 103
Current ESM Environment
DVP Vectorization Workstation
DVP Vectorization Workstation
MicroStationGeographics
MicroStationGeographics
9i
End Result
• Stakeholder requirements met• Sufficient production capacity• Imagery ready when needed• Maintenance of selected key feat• Mode of maintenance is mode of input at source• Data is Authenticated, tagged, published• Multiple service channels
More Sample Projects
Insert here
Leverage Topographic DataASIAN LONGHORN BEETLE INFESTATION
•Individual tree locations mapped in topo database•Buffers developed around infected trees•Accurate assessment of damage ($)•Improved management of resources
Leverage Topographic DataPERMEABILITY CLASSIFICATION
•Stormwater billing may be based on percentage permeable land
•Lot level permeability
•Developed from topographic mapping
Leverage Topographic DataBASEMENT FLOODING
Leverage 3D to identify reverse sloped driveways
Leverage Topographic DataPlanning - BILLBOARDS
Location of Laviciding
http://www.toronto.ca/health/westnile/index.htm
Geospatial Competency Centre
113
Divisions Benefiting from Topo Program
All Divisions which Benefit
• Real Estate, Parks, Planning and others benefit from aerial photos, Toronto Mono Viewer, topographic maps
• CAO’s Office - Hydro One surplus corridor lands study
Geospatial Competency Centre
114
Divisions Benefiting from Topo Program
(cont’d)
Transportation• 3 D workstation environment set up for staff to
inventory pavement markings• topo maps used for preliminary design • used to create municipal map books for operations
staff• emergency snow removal plan
Geospatial Competency Centre
115
Divisions Benefiting from Topo Program
(cont’d)
Water and Wastewater • Wet Weather Flow Master Plan- permeability ratings• water course erosion assessment• used as a base for creating digital sewer and water
main networks• ravine by-law mapping• used as a base for creating the sewer and water main
books