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News — 11 May, 2013

Crossing Boundaries by Tracing Buildings: Mapping Kathmandu from New York City"

Throughout the day you could hear the simple question - 'Is that a building?' -- followed by conversations about shadows, and people, and the construction of a city that seemed so far away from our own.

Throughout the day you could hear the simple question - 'Is that a building?' -- followed by conversations about shadows, and people, and the construction of a city that seemed so far away from our own.

On Sunday, April 21st -- as part of a 17 city US OSM editathon-- a small group in New York City came together to support ongoing efforts of OSM Nepal to map Kathmandu Valley. Over the course of four hours, we traced building footprints from satellite imagery provided by the US State Department Imagery to the Crowd initiative. These high-fidelity footprints are just one of many datasets needed for better disaster preparation, planning and mitigation in Nepal -- a country that sits atop tectonic plates at high risk of earthquake.

As most in NYC were new to such mapping, the Nepal team generously provided training, context, and priorities before the event. This dialogue not only helped the NYC mappers use the tools most effectively but allowed our efforts to fit into OSM Nepal's larger mission of creating an open map of Nepal, for Nepal. We made a small dent -- tracing some 500 buildings of the estimated 500,000 still to be completed. The work is not done, nor are we.

The Sunday effort was the second event designed to advance open mapping in Nepal and we're planning for more. In New York there is growing interest to build OSM data beyond immediate boundaries, especially in areas where such information could help in emergency planning and disaster recovery. While New York City and Kathmandu might seem geographically far apart we find alignment in a mission -- create open maps that help us better understand our world and allow us to build more resilient communities, together.


view from the editathon