About the Flooding Issue The issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the ...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
14 CURRENT | stevie |
June 12, 2017 14:05
| over 7 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesMarch - July 2017 We are drafting and running the stormwater workshop series. Drop in to any! We'll be using this wiki to capture data for this project. February 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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13 | stevie |
March 22, 2017 18:47
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesMarch - July 2017 We are drafting and running the stormwater workshop series. Drop in to any! February 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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Revert | |
12 | stevie |
February 21, 2017 15:55
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesFebruary 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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Revert | |
11 | warren |
February 01, 2017 17:19
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesFebruary 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
|
Revert | |
10 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:10
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesFebruary 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
|
Revert | |
9 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:09
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesFebruary 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
|
Revert | |
8 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:09
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesFebruary 2017 With support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
|
Revert | |
7 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:03
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesWith support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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6 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:03
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. UpdatesWith support from EPNO and Ripple Effect, Public Lab, partners and friends, will be starting a new workshop series for this project! In this workshop series, we'll focus on a specific location that struggles with flooding and stormwater. We'll work together to develop and implement a strategy for monitoring there. The workshops series will run once a month beginning in March through July. The series will cover an introduction to flooding, community mapping of the project site, designing a monitoring strategy and working to implement it. Mark your calendars for March 4th, April 8th, May 13th, June 3rd and July 8th! _About the site: The project site can be seen on this map. The site has many interesting challenges around flooding and stormwater, as well as exciting features both newer and proposed, to help address some of the flooding problems! Some areas we can explore in this project include:
To loop in about the project, join the Gulf Coast Google Group! The Gulf Coast: plots-gulfcoast History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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5 | stevie |
February 01, 2017 17:00
| almost 8 years ago
About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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4 | mimibell |
July 28, 2016 16:00
| over 8 years ago
Depth/Flood sensing in New Orleans About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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3 | stevie |
June 21, 2016 13:15
| over 8 years ago
Depth/Flood sensing in New Orleans About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewer and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found here. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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2 | stevie |
June 06, 2016 14:32
| over 8 years ago
Depth/Flood sensing in New Orleans About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewer and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found (here)[https://publiclab.org/notes/stevie/06-06-2016/reflecting-on-the-depth-sensor-build]. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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1 | stevie |
June 06, 2016 14:14
| over 8 years ago
Depth/Flood sensing in New Orleans About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but to understand how or why our geology, topography, climate, and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, leaving about half of the city below sea level. This means that every bit of water that falls on this city and is not absorbed into the ground needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. When rain falls, an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. Located in the subtropics, New Orleans experiences strong thunderstorms many times during the year; when water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, as it disrupts commutes, damages property, and causes nuisance flooding. On the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue also affects the work of police and emergency medical services, who may be unable to respond quickly to calls due to street flooding. Major local revenue sources, such as the tourism industry are also impacted (how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest?). Then on the management side, it’s a city government issue, in which the New Orleans Sewer and Water Board and City of New Orleans Department of Public Works share responsibility for the drainage system. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found (here)[____]. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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0 | stevie |
June 03, 2016 20:49
| over 8 years ago
Depth/Flood sensing in New Orleans About the Flooding IssueThe issue of flooding goes beyond hurricanes for those who live in the greater New Orleans area. Many people are familiar with the term that “New Orleans is a bowl,” but in understanding how or why our geology and infrastructure is this way, what you really need to know is that every bit of water that falls on this city needs to be pumped out. Physically Pumped Out. New Orleans was built on a swamp and that swamp is sinking, so technically most parts of the city is below sea level. So rain falls, and an extensive infrastructure of storm drains, catchment basins and pumps go to work to get that water out of the city. When water falls faster than the infrastructure can handle, or the system breaks down in an area (or all over), we get flooding. This is an issue many stakeholders are tied to, on the grass roots level we have property owners, renters, businesses, commuters, and neighborhood groups. The issue affects the work of police and emergency medical services, it affects major local revenue sources (think tourism industry and how many times we’ve heard it’s flooding at Jazz Fest). Then in management side, it’s a city government issue, as well as New Orleans Sewer and Water Board, and New Orleans City Works Department. History of this projectThis is an ongoing issue and ongoing discussion. In 2014, Water Works, Propeller and Public Lab hosted a water hackathon where we worked with the Public Lab Coqui and discussed water monitoring in New Orleans. Naturally the flooding question came up and the idea of adding depth to one of the important water monitoring parameters was emphasized. While geographically, many places have worked on low cost water sensing for issues such as detecting salt runoff from roadways in New England, turbidity in waterways in the midwest from Frac Sand Mining in Wisconsin, mining pollution detection in Colombia (**see https://publiclab.org/wiki/open-water for more project info), the New Orleans area has continued it’s interest in depth sensing. In February, 2016, @mimibell sent out a new flood sensing device from http://flood.network/. It included schematics for building a different type of flood sensor. This started a new string conversation and interest. In March, several stakeholders got together to discuss the issue, and what type of project or event could move the idea of low cost flood (or depth) sensing forward. Groups involved in this included Water Works, the City of New Orleans, the local maker space IDIYA, Propeller, Public Lab and the New Orleans maker group. While the idea and structure of how to move forward shifted over the course of several months, ultimately a 4 day event was hosted at IDIYA and Propeller with Water Works and Public Lab. Reflections on this event can be found (here)[____]. What to explore before we think on toolsIn thinking about the flooding/depth sensing issue, there are some major considerations that have come up. While often times we think about a tool in terms of what we want it to do, we’re reframing our question to think about what the underlying issues of flooding are, what advocacy ideas we have in addressing this issue and what a tool would need to be able to do to help us advocate around this issue. Below are some of the questions can helped us prompt our tool exploration:
Secondly:
About the Depth Sensor Prototypes:
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Revert |