This engaging and practical guide is a much-needed new textbook that illustrates the power of geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial analysis. Today’s planner has a wealth of data available to them, much of which is increasingly linked to a specific location. From football clubs to Twitter conversations, government spending to the spread of diseases – data can be mapped. Once mapped, the data begins to tell stories, patterns are revealed, and effective planning decisions can be made. When used effectively, GIS allows students, planners, residents and policymakers to solve wicked problems in the environment, society and the economy.Geospatial data is now more freely available than it ever has been, as is much of the necessary software to analyse it. This contemporary text offers a practical guide to spatial analysis and what it can show us. In addition to explaining what GIS is and why it is such a powerful tool, the authors cover such topics as geovisualization, mapping principles, network analysis and decision making. Offering more than just theoretical or technical principles and concepts, the book applies GIS techniques to the real world, draws on global examples and provides practical advice on mapping the built environment.This accessible text is essential reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students taking planning modules on GIS, data analysis and mapping, as well as for all planners, urbanists and geographers with an interest in how GIS can help us better understand the built environment from a socio-economic perspective.
Ferrari / Rae
GIS for Planning and the Built Environment jetzt bestellen!
Zielgruppe
Lower undergraduate
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction.- 2. Why GIS and planning for the built environment.- 3. GIS: a spatial database of our world.- 4. The currency of GIS.- 5. Geovisualization: Communicating with spatial data.- 6. Mapping and the built environment: some guidance.- 7. ‘Everything is related to everything else’: Understanding spatial analysis.- 8. Network problems and how to solve them.- 9. Decision making using GIS: Bringing it all together.
Ed Ferrari is Director of the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research (CRESR) at Sheffield Hallam University.Alasdair Rae is a Professor at the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the University of Sheffield.