Mapping Lubumbashi

Posted by Unknown on Tuesday, May 6, 2014




Mapping Lubumbashi




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I spent last Saturday helping out HOT, the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team, to improve the map of Lubumbashi, Congo. This session focussed on digitizing the data that was acquired on the ground by volunteers.


But this was not where the effort started. It started a few weeks ago when Jorieke set off to Lubumbashi to organise the mapping party. You can read more about this on the HOT blog.


In cooperation with Doctors without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières UK (MSF UK), HOT organised this mapping effort. With help by students from the University of Lubumbashi, they idea is to map the whole or at least as much as possible of the city of Lubumbashi.


At the start of the Mapathon, Harry Wood went through his usual spiel of introducing OpenStreetMap to the crowd. I dropped in the moment he was done. Just in time to hear Ivan Gayton's talk on the work of MSF and their Congo mapping work. Mapping in Congo is not nearly as simple as it is here, where streets have street names that are neatly printed on street signs. This is not the case in Congo. There no street signs and often, people use names that are either not official, or have no official name anyway. The only way to find out how streets are called, is by asking the people living there!


MSF is interested in street name information, or more precisely, the neighbourhood names so that they have an identifier for statistical analysis for epidemiology. The accurate location names allows them to pinpoint for example cholera outbreaks, and hopefully in the future they can take preventative action against disease outbreaks.


The first step was creating a basic road layout, which was handled by a Mapathon in Berlin. Coordination of such large mapping efforts happen through the OSM Tasking Manager. You can see the job for Lubumbashi at http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/456 They did not stop at Lubumbashi though, and traced a whole of of other towns as well. And the mapping was not only remotely done from Berlin, but OpenStreetMap communities from Hungary, Togo, Burkina helped as well—a true global community.


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Besides this initial road tracing job, there are a few other things still to trace too. If you have time, give them a hand for http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/459


With a basic road layout traced from areal images you have a rough idea on how a city looks like, but nothing beats a survey on the ground to see how things actually are. It is not always easy to spot things on areal imagery.


While remote mapping parties were nearing their completion of the road network, a group of volunteers from Department of Geography of the University of Lubumbashi went out into the neighbourhoods with FieldPapers to do the survey. Through hints from Ivan I understood that it took MSF some time to convince their professor to help out for free. He could hardly believe that some organisation was collecting all this data and then making it available for free. Not just for "no money", but also under an open license. Perhaps he was worried about what Google MapMaker is trying to do in underdeveloped countries—getting volunteers to collect data for them and then locking it up in GoogleMaps. Having open access to the data is of course much more valuable.


FieldPapers allows you to create atlases of areas. It divides this up into bite size chunks so that y





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