Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps · • recommend data points x, y...

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Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps April 20, 2018

Transcript of Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps · • recommend data points x, y...

Page 1: Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps · • recommend data points x, y and z are collected • provide some networking approaches that can be integrated

Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps

April 20, 2018

Page 2: Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps · • recommend data points x, y and z are collected • provide some networking approaches that can be integrated

The Goal – Data Collection and Consistency

Obtain regionally consistent pedestrian asset data that supports:

• potential model improvements for pedestrian travel

• plan monitoring

• consistent evaluation of pedestrian connectivity needs region-wide

• the preservation and maintenance work program

• local needs

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Composite Connectivity Index

Sound Transit and King County Metro studyAnalysis included:

Intersection Density Sidewalk CoverageRoute directness Projected increase in transit ridershipSignalized Arterial Crossings Bike Stress

Transit Access Assessments

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The Challenge

• Inconsistent data formats between jurisdictions – data sets are difficult to integrate

• Inconsistent information – different data points are collected and not consistent regionally

• Lack of data in some areas

• Longevity of data collection activities and updates

• Challenge of sharing and accessing data in one place

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The Challenge

Sidewalk Data Set Example: Inconsistent data formats and lack of detailed information

Polygons Lines on both sidesCenter line with L/R attributes PDF map

No additional data

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Step 1: Sidewalk Network in OSM

Start with entering sidewalk data into Open Street Maps (OSM)

1. Begin with access to transit locations

2. Prioritize where to begin:• not to overlap what other agencies are doing• suggest high capacity transit and ferries to start

3. Decide on the method: sidewalks as metadata to roads vs. sidewalks mapped as ‘ways’

4. Identify process (bulk import or manual coding)

5. Define essential tags that are needed for step 1

6. Get started…

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Why PSRC is choosing Open Street Maps

• Existing transit networks and tools already use OSM networks

• Open source – opportunity for PSRC and partners to collectively contribute to one data set

• Data in OSM would benefit from analysis tools developed or being developed (AccessMap)

• Provides interoperability and maintainability

Page 8: Pedestrian Data Collection and Consistency in Open Street Maps · • recommend data points x, y and z are collected • provide some networking approaches that can be integrated
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TriMet and OpenStreetMap

● TriMet provides transit in Portland, Oregon region

● Leaders in open source tools/data

● Helped launch OpenTripPlanner (OTP) in 2009

● Adopted OSMin 2011

Madeline [email protected]

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Street Data Comparison - why TriMet chose OSM

Commercial

● Costly● Limited control over data

quality and updates

Centerline Files

● Free● Limited coverage area● Not designed for routing

purposes

OpenStreetMap

● Free● Seamless coverage worldwide ● Designed for and supports multi-

modal routing● Investment in community product for

shared benefits● More control, higher quality

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TriMet 2016 sidewalk tagging

PBOT Growing Transit Communities Pilot

Tagged before 2016 (by both TriMet and broader OSM community)

Sidewalk ProjectColored streetshave sidewalk tags

© OpenStreetMap Contributors. Esri basemap 11

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2017 — Expanding to seven counties

1/1/17: 35.7% complete 4/1/17: 72.2% complete 7/1/17: 85.7% complete

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Step 1: Drawing in the sidewalk network

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Sidewalks as metadata vs. sidewalks as ways

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Why centerline tags and not separate ways?

● Speed and consistency● Maintenance concerns ● Issues for trip plan narratives

○ Sidewalks don’t have names○ Many more segments

● Would require significant work on OTP code

From https://www.opensidewalks.com/

VS

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Sidewalk tagging method

● No imports — fully manual● Added centerline tag —

sidewalk=both|left|right|no● Outreach at meetups and via local

OSM user group email● JOSM with sidewalk style● Reference:

○ Local shapefiles○ Best available imagery

● Divided street segments

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Next steps for TriMet

● OSM Data Maintenance○ Focus on newly constructed areas○ QA/QC

● Continue exploring ways to get curb-level detail into OSM and OTP

● Expansion of Mapillary coverage?

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OpenSidewalks in OSM (sidewalks as ways) Anat Caspi, PhD, [email protected]

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Personalized interpretationMakes sidewalk attribute costing possible Truly any tags considered in routing and changed on the fly with user input.

Sidewalk Curb cutSurfaceElevationElevatorsConstruction

Enhancements made possible by OpenSidewalks

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With OpenSidewalks: Clear data-driven infrastructure decisions

Enhancements made possible by sidewalks as ways

Before OpenSidewalks: “as the crow flies;” zero consideration for pedestrian access

Ability to look at travel via real ability-based isochrones (same color band = same time to travel)

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How do we get the data?

Coordinate imports of open data

sidewalkifycrossify

Split into tasks

Human verification

OpenSidewalks tools UW can provide

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Open Imports

1. Create a proposal (example: Santa Clara County sidewalk import)

2. Gain permission to use the data in OSM

3. Announce to OSM community (OSM US Chapter)

4. Wait a reasonable period of time and if no-pushback, you start importing (two weeks-ish)

5. Import must conflate with existing data – not much sidewalk data now so not much conflation done

6. Sidewalk imports would require adding in crossings after

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How do we get the data?

Crowdsource the network from scratch

Upload to a service

Task + crowdsource

Take geotagged pictures

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Mapillary – crowdsourced street level views

https://www.mapillary.com/

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Mapillary

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Step 1: Sidewalk Network in OSM

Start with entering sidewalk data into Open Street Maps (OSM)

1. Begin with access to transit locations

2. Prioritize where to begin:• not to overlap what other agencies are doing• suggest high capacity transit and ferries to start

3. Decide on the method: sidewalks as metadata to roads vs. sidewalks mapped as ‘ways’

4. Identify process (bulk import or manual coding)

5. Define essential tags that are needed for step 1

6. Get started…

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Choosing a Methodology

Pilot study:• Choose handful of existing or future transit hubs for pilot

(places where there is added benefit without overlapping efforts)

• Test various methods (within ½ mile transit shed) and report on time and benefits of each :• Manual coding of sidewalks as metadata• Manual coding of sidewalks as ways• Import sidewalks as ways

• Sidewalks, crossings

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Step 2: Consistency for other attributes

• Identify what other attributes are important to collect• Condition, accessibility, width, slope, etc.• For what purpose – access routing, maintenance costs,

other local needs

• Work with BPAC and OSM Community on consistency of attributes

• OSM is a global community where some consistency (standards) have been set, some can be proposed

• Communicating the proposed framework

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/sidewalk_schema#The_underlying_pedestrian_network

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A potential ‘menu’ approach

‘Menu’ approach as guidance for local jurisdictions (example):

• recommend data points x, y and z are collected

• provide some networking approaches that can be integrated into regional data sets or OSM (example: ArcGIS for local governments)

• contribution of data collection into Open Street Maps

• Suggested process (sidewalks as metadata or ways)

• Suggested tagging of attributes

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Kim Scrivner, [email protected], 206-971-3281

Kim [email protected]