Publication

Methods and evaluation in the historical mapping of cities

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  • 06/25/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Michael Page, Emory UniversityYa Kang, Yonsei UniversityJay Varner, Emory UniversityKeeheon Lee, Yonsei UniversityAlexander Maximillian Cors, Emory UniversityA. Basu, University of ArkansasK. Durante, Stanford UniversityIan Burr, Emory University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2023-06-23
Publisher
  • Copernicus Publications
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • © Author(s) 2023.
License
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
Volume
  • 48
Issue
  • 4
Abstract
  • Through a (re)mapping and spatial modeling of a city’s past, exploratory web applications can be built to examine urban histories and dynamically engage scholars and the public. Working on Emory University’s OpenWorld Atlanta project (OWA), researchers used geospatial technologies and methods to extract data from archives and other sources to build historical data models, geodatabases, and geocoders that enabled the development of web-based dynamic map interfaces. With a focus on the early stages of urban development of the city of Atlanta in the southeastern United States, this platform provides exploratory visualizations of city history along with a wealth of detail for specific time periods, specifically circa 1878 and 1928, given the opportunity provides by key map publications of the city. These dynamically enabled historical maps were then connected to digital images, geospatial vector data, descriptive text, and labels and then structured in a content management system. While this project began as a digitization project centered on two atlases in the Rose Library collection at Emory University, it has grown to include contributors from several partner institutions. Therefore, this paper outlines the OWA project within a larger consortium of institutions and researchers focusing on production methods, platform development, interface design, and evaluation using open-data and open-source methods and software in cities' historical mapping and modeling. Drawing upon historical maps, city directories, archival collections, newspapers, and census data, projects like OWA allow researchers to analyze spatially grounded questions. In addition, they may serve the public as a valuable informational resource to learn about their neighborhood’s past and even contribute materials from family archives or stories.
Author Notes
  • The authors of this paper would like to acknowledge the contributions of all the students who have worked on this project at varying degrees and over the years the project has been in development. The platform was only possible with their involvement. We thank the Halle Institute for Global Research at Emory University and the Yonsei University Frontier Lab for awarding a collaborative research grant to our team, enabling us to bring together scholars and practitioners from Atlanta and Seoul during multiple visits in the past four years.
Keywords
Research Categories
  • Physical Geography
  • Environmental Sciences

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