Temporary Mapping – Solar Decathlon
This week on the DC National Mall there is the 2009 Solar Decathlon. It’s a contest between 20 student groups from around the world that build, on the mall, sustainable, energy efficient, and modern houses. The competition measures their efficiency, quality, resource usage, and design. It’s a one week miny village.
So of course, like any village, it needed to be mapped. I went down Saturday afternoon and captured the locations and names of all the buildings and paths that will be up for the week. These are then loaded into OpenStreetMap with start_date and end_date tags that notify the renderer when the features should be visible. It’s a similar model to how Burning Man is mapped year after year as it walks along the Black Rock Desert.
It’s ephemeral mapping – objects that exist in real place, but just for small slices of time. Important as any other building, yet typically relegated to flyers or verbal descriptions.
The fascinating part of projects like this is that OpenStreetMap allowed me to create a map that was useful and immediate. Within minutes of uploading the data, it was available as rendered tiles, vector data, and downloadable to GPS units and iPhones. People on the mall could immediately view the local map with this new information.
It’s a nice demonstration of how community projects like OpenStreetMap will continue to innovate faster, and more openly, then other ‘crowd-sourcing’ options.

My name is
October 13th, 2009 at 11:48 am (#)
Could this be used for something like the Rock Creek Parkway that is one-way for certain hours of the day?
October 13th, 2009 at 11:52 am (#)
Definitely – though not start_date, that implies that a feature just doesn’t exist before/after a date.
What you want to look at are the access (http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:access) and time restriction (http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/Time_restricted_tags) tags.
October 13th, 2009 at 12:09 pm (#)
I like this much better than the map that the Solar Decathlon team has put together: http://www.solardecathlon.org/map.cfm
Thanks!
October 13th, 2009 at 12:42 pm (#)
Hey, good work.
Of course ephemeral is pretty subjective. Looking at it from an historical or archaeological perspective pretty much everything exists for a relatively short period of time and would naturally have a start_date/end_date (or period, or either).
Cheers,
A
October 13th, 2009 at 5:31 pm (#)
Actually don’t think start_date/end_date are yet noticed by the rendering system. We’re pushing the envelope
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=40.7814&lon=-119.2062&zoom=13&layers=B000FTF
October 16th, 2009 at 9:19 am (#)
Could you use this to do historic mapping?