Skip to main content

Proceedings of the Sixth Annual UW GIS Symposium: The Disaster Response Exercise: Mapping a Post-Earthquake Environment from a Bicyclist's Perspective

Proceedings of the Sixth Annual UW GIS Symposium
The Disaster Response Exercise: Mapping a Post-Earthquake Environment from a Bicyclist's Perspective
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeUniversity of Washington GIS Symposiums
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Contributors
  3. Contents
  4. Preface
  5. Keynote
  6. Short Talks
    1. Interactive Digital Story Mapping to Document Housing (In)justice through Community-Based Design
    2. The Uneven Geographies of Digital Food Apartheid
    3. Entanglements: Counter-Mapping the History of Asian Migration onto Coast Salish Lands
    4. 'Reclaiming Venus' through ArcGIS Story Maps
    5. Earthquakes influence on populations and land cover in King County with GIS
    6. Snow Coverage on Mount Rainier: 2001 vs. 2021
    7. The Disaster Response Exercise: Mapping a Post-Earthquake Environment from a Bicyclist's Perspective

The Disaster Response Exercise: Mapping a Post-Earthquake Environment from a Bicyclist's Perspective

Mike Lang, Environmental Science and Resource Management and Elizabeth Davis, Geology

In this presentation, Mike Lang and Elizabeth Davis describe the creation of a printed map that was used for navigation during a bicycle-based Disaster Response Exercise (DRE). This exercise simulated a supply run on the third day after a devastating Seattle earthquake and challenged cargo bicyclists to carry loads of critical supplies, food, and water, while avoiding natural hazards like fault scarps and landslides. The exercise took place on April 24th, 2022 in West Seattle and was a component of volunteer ride support efforts for Cascade Bicycle Club's "Ride for Major Taylor"event. This map was created in ArcGIS Pro using the 2020 Seattle Bike Map, as well as public GIS data available from the City of Seattle and Washington DNR. By using the Seattle Bike Map layer as the basemap then superimposing natural hazard layers on top, participants visualized the changes that earthquakes might bring to familiar urban bicycle infrastructure. Public datasets used included tsunami inundation zones, liquefaction zones, possible landslide areas, known unreinforced masonry buildings (URM's), and seismogenic faults. Community Emergency Hub and Little Free Pantry layers were created by geocoding known addresses. This map contributes to larger disaster preparedness efforts in the City of Seattle and empowers members of the cycling community to respond in the event of a disaster. More of these DRE events are being planned for the coming months.

Slide from "The Disaster Response Exercise: Mapping a Post-Earthquake Environment from a Bicyclist's Perspective" presentation

Annotate

Previous
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org