Top Banner
Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical Services Team
18

Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Prudence Rice
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for

Great Lakes Stormwater WorkshopCleveland, Ohio

August 10, 2006

Kimberly Majerus

FHWA-Resource Center

Environmental Technical Services Team

Page 2: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Stormwater, Water Quality, NPDES, Soils, Erosion, Sediment, Drainage, Impacts

Hydrology & water quality alteration –

physical, chemical, biological

To handle these various responsibilities – we need maps

Page 3: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Step One: Identify Users & User Needs

Select Existing Data & Tools &

Eval Need for New Ones

Deliver Solutions & Tools & Measure Benefits

Assess Data Needs and Scale

(spatial & temporal)

Life Cycle toLife Cycle toMatch Match User NeedsUser Needs

Identify Available Data, Methods, Tools

& also Gaps

Use of GIS & Technology – How do we get there? Technology Life Cycle to Match User Needs

Design & Develop Data and Tools

& Maintenance Plan

Page 4: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

National Spatial Data Infrastructurewww.geo-one-stop.gov

Local Data & Uses

County/Parish

Regional & National

Share & Use- Free GIS Map Data at Various Levels

Page 5: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Free GIS Data to Download from the Web (Great Lakes states listed, from National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI))

Spatial GIS Data Online Web Clearinghouses:

NATIONWIDE SOURCES (NSDI) http://www.geo-one-stop.gov

ILLINOIS http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/nsdihome/ISGSindex.html

INDIANA http://in-ulib-brayton.ads.iu.edu/MetadataExplorer/

MICHIGAN http://www.mcgi.state.mi.us/mgdl/

MINNESOTA http://www.lmic.state.mn.us/chouse/index.html

NEW YORK http://www.nysgis.state.ny.us/index.html

OHIO http://www.ohioview.org/search/

PENNSYLVANIA http://www.pasda.psu.edu/access/index.shtml

WISCONSIN http://www.sco.wisc.edu/wisclinc/

Page 6: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Remote Sensing – Free Orthophotographs

Geographically referenced to the earth

(black/white or color of various scales) Presence of:

Impervious surfaces?

Water bodies?

Drainage patterns?

Comp storage?

------------------------New Cooperative Effort: Imagery for the Nation Free from Web at IL Geospatial

Data Clearinghouse, IDOT as partner

Page 7: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

GIS, Tools, Data, and MethodsExample Study - use of Free Data from the web

(floodplains, streams, orthos, elev, soils, trans, + more) National Spatial Data Infrastructure (www.geo-one-stop.gov)

Page 8: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Free Map Data: U.S. Hydrologic Units (USGS)

(watersheds)

Page 9: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

GIS Tools & Data: Stormwater & Water Quality

Three Examples to Highlight:

• Cleveland, OH Pilot Research for WatTrans GIS & Decision Support System (DSS)

• NYSDOT mapping of drainage outfalls using GPS & GIS

• PA Stormwater & Water Data on Web – at PA State GIS Clearinghouse

Page 10: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

GIS-Based Decision Support System (DSS) - Ohio WatTrans Planning, Pilot Research for Cleveland area, OH

3 components OH DSS Tool as:1. GIS maps for project area -with viewer

2. DSS output (to consider potential effects in project area and watersheds and possible BMPs)

3. Links to more information using DSS as first step

Partners: USGS in OH, the Cuyahoga River Remedial Action Plan (RAP), USEPA, the Ohio Dept of Transportation, the Northeast Ohio Areawide Coordinating Agency and others.

Page 11: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

NYSDOT Drainage Outfall Mapping for State Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (SPDES)

Page 12: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

NYSDOT SPDES Outfall Mapping- example computer screen

More than 4000 drainage outfallshave been mapped using GPS and GIS

Page 13: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Power Tools-Spatial Analysis: GIS -what no other tool can doIL GIS Predictive Modeling and Tools for Impact Assessment, Mitigation and Monitoring after construction

GIS Model Simulations:

Baseline “before” construction

Kkk

K

K

K

K

K

Predicted Model Results: “After” construction

Proposed Trans

Page 14: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Throughout Project Delivery- use Data & Tools

Project Delivery Cycle: Planning, Studies, Drainage, Design, Construction, O&MEnvironmental Approvals, Commitments, and Monitoring

Page 15: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

GIS, Tools, and Data

Factors for Success(next pages to read as handout

For Great Lakes workshop)

Page 16: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Step One: Identify Users & User Needs

Select Existing Data & Tools &

Eval Need for New Ones

Deliver Solutions & Tools & Measure Benefits

Assess Data Needs and Scale

(spatial & temporal)

Life Cycle toLife Cycle toMatch Match User NeedsUser Needs

Identify Available Data, Methods, Tools

& also Gaps

Use of GIS & Technology – How do we get there? Technology Life Cycle to Match User Needs

Design & Develop Data and Tools

& Maintenance Plan

Page 17: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Formula for Success: Using GIS for In-House and Contracted Work

Determine - how data and GIS to be used, by who

Measure benefits of GIS: before and after

Can focus on one topic but keep the door open for

integrated analyses and decisions

Page 18: Showcasing GIS Tools and Maps for Great Lakes Stormwater Workshop Cleveland, Ohio August 10, 2006 Kimberly Majerus FHWA-Resource Center Environmental Technical.

Formula for Success (cont): Using GIS for In-House and Contracted Work

Match scale & complexity to the decision

Include flexibility and scalability into tool

Pursue consistency in data development & delivery

Useful data is available and downloadable for free