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Infrastructure and Management

Infrastructure and Management. Spatial Information Management in the City of Saint Paul. Spatial data use at a glance. We are: The City of Saint Paul, which includes all of the infrastructure within the public Right-of-way.

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Infrastructure and Management

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  1. InfrastructureandManagement

    Spatial Information Management in the City of Saint Paul
  2. Spatial data use at a glance We are: The City of Saint Paul, which includes all of the infrastructure within the public Right-of-way. We use: Spatial tools for Infrastructure Maintenance Management tasks. The “bad”: Data that is: hard to find and/or it’s out of date. The “good”: Easy to find and up to date. We can: Share now, are setup, ready and willing to partner with other spatial data owners to provide the same capabilities at a regional level (and beyond?).
  3. SECTION 1 - We are . . . The City of Saint Paul
  4. Some of the (main) City tasks Infrastructure Maintenance Management tasks. Data is sourced from: Public Works, Safety and Inspections, Planning and Economic Development, Parks & Rec., Office of Technology, Fire, Police, Real Estate, and District Councils. Planning, Engineering tasks and Code enforcement. Planning: Research, Ownership, Zoning. Engineering: Visualization, Design and Build processes. Code Enforcement: Licensing, Permitting. Only 56 sq. mi., but densely developed. Management of public Right-of-way (non taxed areas). Management of Parcel information and Addressing.
  5. Spatial Data For . . . SECTION 2 – We use . . . Traffic Signs Parking Meters Storm Sewers Sanitary Sewer Address Points Street Centerlines Planimetrics (Physical Structures) Lighting In other words . . . . . . keeping track of a lot of stuff ! Property or Survey Lines Right-of-way Corridor Contour Lines
  6. Discussion points on data access: Data publishing. Internal access, 220 layers. External access, 58 layers. 10 to 15 layers in development at any one time. A new layer published every 3 – 4 weeks. Management and upkeep of datasets. 27 Live Database connections, 21 Raster layers, mostly aerials, dating to the 1940s 31 infrastructure layers. Data harvesting. 19 WMS Services, from other agencies and government units.
  7. Example Dataset(s) 31,806 Street Lights 851 miles of Streets 1,254 miles of Sewers 31,806 Street Lights 1,007 miles of sidewalks 331 Bridges 385 Signals 26,100 Catch Basins.
  8. Example Dataset Data Repository Secured and Shared Folder system of publishing. Contains data and display configuration files. Data Custodians Are generally, the owner / authors of the datasets, or data maintenance assignee. Cartography and frequency of updating. Publishing Publishing Classes (Internal only, External, etc) Simplified metadata required for publishing. Contact for reporting of errors or omissions.
  9. Bringing it all together
  10. Bringing it all together Open source software Provides a very high level of flexibility for creation and customization of the software. Our Spatial discovery tool is called GISmo. Which uses the GeoMoose open source project. GeoMoose originated at the City. The GISmo data catalog and tools are fed into more than just the Web Browser. The GISmo data feeds all of the 90+ AutoCAD workstations in the City, ESRI clients, other City databases (Addressing, etc), QuantumGIS, Google Earth and Google Maps, to name a few.
  11. Successes. SECTION 3(a) – The good . . . Data owners take Responsibility. You can trust what’s in GISmo. It’s been going Strong since 2004. Open Source = Flexibility !
  12. Successes. Trust in the System and the data authors. Has lead to continued success. Contributions of data for Publishing. Eased many previously labor intensive processes. Owners of data sets are taking responsibility for their data. In many cases the data was always there and updated, just not in a form for general reuse. The Open Source toolsets have allowed us a very high level of flexibility to respond to users.
  13. Problems. SECTION 3(b) – The bad . . . Some datasets still don’t have a custodian for publishing. Some features that could still be added. The system is functioninal, but new capabilities exist.
  14. Problems. What problems? Still those data owners not seeing the benefits of publishing to the masses. Still some data sets available, but without a custodian to maintain. Still some labor intensive tasks that could be streamlined with a better system development team in place. System is getting dated and revamping of system is being planned.
  15. Share Information. SECTION 4(a) – We can . . .
  16. We are sharing now. The GISmo system of tools is already sharing data. All of our published data, internal as well as external, is available as a WMS, or OGC Web Map Services. Where appropriate, selected datasets are also available as WFS layers, or Web Feature Services. Some layers need to be protected from prying eyes for security or contractual reasons. Publishing of the restricted datasets requires more administrative effort, but it is configurable.
  17. Do more Sharing. SECTION 4(b) – We want to . . .
  18. We want to do more. We want to share more of our data and toolsets. We want access to more data from other agencies. We need a method of securing sensitive datasets with an easy to use administrative interface. Need to make it work across regional areas for other agencies and units of government.
  19. What are you willing to do? We’re ready to work with outside agencies to build out these capabilities for the region (and beyond?) The entire system described here can be configured in a portable manner to be run from a USB stick or DVD, even database content as a local data cache. The current system is configured in a nodal form, and more nodes of information can be added. This allows for the distributed maintenance of data, while also allowing for a centralized publishing.
  20. GeoMoose Examples:
  21. Done. Bob Basques GIS Systems Developer City of Saint Paul, Public Works, Technical Services bob.basques@ci.stpaul.mn.us 651.273.2073
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