Date: Fri 07-Feb-1997
Date: Fri 07-Feb-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
HVCEO-GIS-digital-mapping
Full Text:
HVCEO GIS Mapping System Feature
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The regional planning agency is creating color-coded, computer-generated maps
to help its 10 member towns plan future land uses.
All the data in the Geographic Information System (GIS) is information that
can be referenced to a map, explained Dave Hannon, senior planner for the
Housatonic Valley Council of Elected Officials (HVCEO).
HVCEO is the regional planning agency for Newtown, Brookfield, Bethel,
Redding, Bridgewater, New Milford, Sherman, New Fairfield, Danbury and
Ridgefield.
If member towns can provide HVCEO with a digital "base map," the regional
planning agency can provide those towns with massive amounts of electronically
mapped data for land use planning, explained HVCEO Executive Director Jonathan
Chew.
A digitized municipal base map delineates all individual properties within a
town. It also includes basic features such as streets and bodies of water.
Although such base maps may exist on paper, to be usable in the GIS system
they must be digitized, or converted into a form that can be stored,
manipulated and retrieved by a computer. HVCEO's standard of reference for its
GIS mapping of the Housatonic Region is the United States Geological Survey's
(USGS) topographical quadrangle map series.
Because municipally-generated base maps generally will be somewhat
"distorted," those maps are then computer-corrected to conform with the USGS
quadrangles, Mr Chew said.
HVCEO uses cartographic software known as MapInfo Professional, a relatively
easy-to-use program which runs under the Microsoft Windows operating system.
The software contains "layers" or "electronic overlays" of information in
various categories, allowing the computer user to choose exactly what
information he or she wants displayed on the map they are producing. Map
scales are variable.
For example, a user could "mouse click" on an individual parcel of land and
see displayed: the acreage; the land use; the assessed value; the size of
structures; the owner's address; construction quality; and the date of
construction, plus other information.
Similarly, the computer user can obtain a parcel's: zoning category;
topography; and wetland areas to help determine the land's suitability for
construction.
For public health uses, a computer user could retrieve information on: well
water contamination; septic system failures; the presence of public water
supplies; and the placements of sanitary sewers, among other data.
Besides displaying information on an individual parcel, the GIS system can
accept various criteria specified by the computer user and depict the
locations which meet those criteria, Mr Chew said.
For example, a computer user specifies he wants to see properties with:
industrial zoning; lots less than 30,000 square feet; public water service;
natural gas service; sanitary sewer service; street lighting, and storm
sewers. Those parameters are entered into the computer and it displays a map
bearing all the locations meeting those criteria. The color map is printable.
Towns can acquire basic GIS software for an in-house electronic map system for
under $5,000, Mr Chew said. More advanced software with added features would
cost towns under $20,000. Sophisticated software including tax assessment maps
meeting aerial photography standards would cost towns up to $150,000, he said.
Mr Chew said towns also would have to buy computer hardware on which to run
the map software, as well as designate some employee or part-time person to
operate the map system.
In the region, the only two towns which haven't participated in the HVCEO's
GIS system are Newtown and Bridgewater, according to Mr Chew.
Of the map system, Newtown First Selectman Robert Cascella said "At some
point, in the future, it would be very, very helpful." But the town isn't now
in a financial position to participate, he said. "I believe fixing the roads
is more important right now," he said. When GIS technology drops in price, the
town will review whether it wants to become involved, he said.
Community Development Director Elizabeth Stocker said a GIS system would be a
useful municipal planning tool for depicting zoning boundaries, wetlands,
drainage structures, septic systems, sewer lines and water lines. Ms Stocker
said she expects the GIS system will be used in Newtown in the future, but
added it's unclear when that will happen.
Public Works Director Fred Hurley said a GIS system would be a major
improvement for the town in terms of keeping an inventory of physical
improvements. The GIS system allows mapping to be continually upgraded, he
said. He termed it "a tremendous asset for infrastructure management."
Michael Ryer, chairman of Ryer Associates, a Danbury firm that sells
commercial and industrial real estate, said his company recently acquired the
GIS system as a sales tool.
The system will be used to show clients properties which meet their purchasing
criteria, Mr Ryer said. Clients are particularly interested in being located
near fiber optic transmission lines, so Ryer Associates will set up its GIS
system to depict the presence of such utilities, among much other information
about various commercial/industrial properties, he said.
Ryer Associates plans to place all its real estate listings on its GIS system,
as well as its competitors listings, Mr Ryer said.
The deeper the real estate company gets into GIS, the more creative it can
become in marketing its properties, he said. Income levels and population
densities eventually could be depicted on the maps, he said.
"For people looking for industrial property, we think it has great potential,"
Mr Ryer said.
Ryer Associates plans to confer with HVCEO as the real estate firm develops it
specific uses of the GIS system, Mr Ryer said.
Mr Chew said there's much power in knowledge and GIS system makes
geographically-based knowledge publicly available.
Planning consultants who have been formulating recommendations on economic
development, transportation and land conservation in the Exit 9 area of
Interstate-84 in Hawleyville have used GIS computer mapping to help them
refine their plans, Mr Hannon said.
HVCEO is awaiting digitized information from the state Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) depicting soil types. That data will allow the
regional planning agency to depict wetland soils on its GIS system, Mr Chew
said.
Also, HVCEO plans to seek bids to create a "cultural layer" for its regional
map including the depiction of bus routes, industrial parks, corporate
offices, shopping centers, institutions, schools, condominiums, apartments,
municipal facilities, and open space areas.
The DEP and other state agencies are constantly developing new layers of
information for the GIS system, Mr Chew said.
The beauty of GIS is it can be used by every department in a municipality
which stores information that can be keyed to geographic locations, Mr Chew
said. Such a geographic reference is keyed to either a street address or to
lines of latitude and longitude.
