Last September I blogged about North Shore City, a municipality in New Zealand, that has made maps of its water, waste water and storm water network infrastructure publically available on the web. Not only is the location of the underground infrastructure accessible, but users can query each facility to determine properties like type of pipe, diameter, and when it was installed.
I have just heard from Saba Issa at North Shore City that their GIS viewer has just been redone and the new one allows users to download raster and vector data as well as view
- where road works are taking place
- (ocean) spray and wind zones
- property and road boundaries
- piped assets such as water pipes, manholes, hydrants, catchpits and valves
- information about piped assets
What would be really interesting to find out is how they managed to implement this without the project being killed for security reasons. Making water infrastructure information available to the public is usually something those tasked with securing the water service are reluctant to do. Glad to see North Shore City isn't afraid of potential abuse. The positive uses of this map will far outweigh the negative.
Posted by: John Reiser | June 18, 2009 at 02:03 PM