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Development of an Enterprise Transportation Data Model for Fairfax County, Virginia Presented by:. Jim Fries PlanGraphics, Inc. Brendan Ford Fairfax County GIS. Presentation Topics. Background/Existing Situation Model Requirements Model Development Process Existing Model Review
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Development of an Enterprise Transportation Data Model for Fairfax County, VirginiaPresented by: Jim Fries PlanGraphics, Inc Brendan Ford Fairfax County GIS
Presentation Topics • Background/Existing Situation • Model Requirements • Model Development Process • Existing Model Review • Transportation Network Applications • 911 CAD and Non-emergency Routing Needs • Logical Model • Issues and Next Steps
Where is Fairfax County? • 1990 Population: 818,584 • 2000 Population: 969,749 (+18.5%) • Total Land Area:400 square miles • Roadway Miles: Over 4,000 miles
Regional Area City of Fairfax City of Falls Church Loudoun County Arlington County City of Alexandria Prince William County Fairfax County Stafford County
Existing Situation • Multiple centerlines currently in use • Enterprise, School, E911 • Implementing a new CAD system • Go live target of Q4 2008 • Strong data sharing ties with State and other local governments • Lots of users and agencies with desire to perform AVRR applications • Existing CAD system does not support routing
Enterprise Centerline • Relatively simple data model • One of the most detailed in Virginia • Over 40 attributes • Maintained in Oracle/ArcSDE • Regional (multi-jurisdiction) coverage • Updated regularly based on (a) plat recordation, (b) site plan approval, (c) error reports from users, and (d) annual orthoimagery updates • Contains few attributes that support routing
Centerline Model Requirements • Provide a single centerline model that can be used by all Fairfax County agencies irrespective of purpose • Support advanced automated routing for Fairfax County’s public safety agencies (Police, Fire & Rescue, Sheriff, Emergency Management) using new CAD software • Support routing by non public safety agencies • Allow use by Virginia State Police and Virginia Department of Transportation to be co-located in new joint Public Safety and Transportation Operations Center (PSTOC) • Contribute to the maintenance of the new VITA road centerline (RCL) dataset for the entire Commonwealth of Virginia
Participating Agencies Public Safety • Police • Fire & Rescue • Sheriff • OEM • DPSC • VSP Non-Public Safety • Public Works and Environmental Services • Transportation • Human Services • Public Schools • GIS • Others (Parks, TA, etc.) • VDOT • VITA
Model Development Process • Three Step Process: Centerline, AVRR, and Model • Step One: Centerline • Ascertain existing County street centerline and addressing components, processes, and procedures • Analyze CAD products for centerline and routing capabilities • Evaluate available models, standards, and protocols • Establish comprehensive street centerline requirements • Assess external state and local data sources (9 entities) • Step Two: AVRR • Establish automated vehicle routing recommendation (AVRR) requirements • Evaluate non-commercial sources for routing data (26 entities)
Model Development Process – con’t • Step Three: Transportation Network Model • Document enterprise transportation network and AVRR requirements • Prepare and Review Conceptual Strawman Model • Develop Logical Data Model • Prepare Physical Data Model
Transportation Network Applications • Address Location(e.g. geocoding, address assignment) • General Analysis/Modeling(e.g., incident and network analysis) • General Reference(e.g., base map layer, reporting, visual reference) • Permitting(e.g., coordination, inspection scheduling) • Planning(e.g., employment and housing forecasts, new facility site selection, route selection, traffic zone analysis, highway planning) • Road Attribute Determination(e.g., cross street determination, legal speed limit confirmation) • Public Health and Safety(e.g., 911 dispatching, alert notification) • Emergency Routing(e.g., network incident response, criminal escape route determination, evacuation route selection) • Routine Routing(e.g., school buses, solid waste, legal service) • Asset/Infrastructure Management(e.g., equipment tracking, project operation and maintenance)
Automated Routing Needs • Automated routing routines must account for multiple factors: • direction of travel • speed (legal and free flow) • grade/inclination • traffic flow • impedances (intersections, turn restrictions, vehicle restrictions, blockages, obstacles) • other risk factors • Nearly all agencies recognize the value of performing automated routing across an integrated network that consists of all roadways, pathways, railways, and waterways • Only four County agencies (public schools, transit,para-transit, solid waste) currently do limited computerized routing using different proprietary COTS software packages
Logical Model Characteristics • Contains point, polyline, polygon, boundary, and other features • Includes 53 primary tables • Incorporates raster imagery • Provides a non-asset management focus • Introduces a “connector” polyline feature for use in routing • Meets nearly all needs of Fairfax County agencies and VDOT • Allows incremental adoption by other regional jurisdictions • Supports point addressing and integration with County’s Master Address Repository (MAR) for CAD
Issues and Next Steps • 911 Dispatch requires a complete network of both planned and actual roads for public safety incident response, and this requirement will necessitate a change in current County street centerline updating procedures (three stage approach) • A variety of relatively minor anomalies with the current enterprise centerline will need to be resolved • No single source of data exists to populate the new model • Multiple existing sources and techniques will need to be utilized to build and maintain some portions of the new transportation network database; new sources and procedures will also be required to populate other data elements
Issues and Next Steps – con’t • Some County agencies have unique centerline requirements because of their current COTS software, and some software/procedural modifications may be required • CAD AVRR routines emphasize roadway routing and may not be sophisticated enough to effectively use all modes and data included in the transportation network model • Regional data will be considerably less detailed than Fairfax County data
Next Steps • Produce physical data model • Determine data gaps • Prepare data migration plan for existing data sources • Craft development plan for missing data • Generate statement of work to produce data required for transportationnetwork database and AVRR factors • Prepare data procurement RFP • Evaluate current 911 CAD layers for migration • Prepare CAD conversion statement of work and RFP
Presented by: Jim Fries Executive Consultant PlanGraphics, Inc. jfries@plangraphics.com and in absentia Brendan Ford Application Development Manager Fairfax County Department of Information Technology Geographic Information Services Brendan.Ford@fairfaxcounty.gov