Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
and Disaster Risk Reduction
Yantisa Akhadi - yantisa@hotosm.org
Project Manager - Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team, Indonesia
OpenStreetMap and Emergency Response
©OpenStreetMap and Contributors CC-BY-SA
Haiti - 2010
Nepal - 2015
Credits: U.S. State Department
Nepal - 2015
Credits: U.S. State Department
Source: https://www.mapbox.com/blog/nepal-earthquake-animation/
Nepal - 2015
Source: https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/dekstop/diary/37841
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
&
Disaster Risk Reduction
It start with the question:
can OpenStreetMap be used to map
exposure in Indonesia??
2011-2016
Recruit 8 trainers
101 trainings
16 provinces
2,478 participants
4,255,230 buildings mapped
0
1,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
10/8/10 14/9/11 18/10/12 22/11/13 27/12/14 31/1/16
Buildingcount
Date
Building count vs. Date
Building count
2011-2013
Case Studies:
DKI Jakarta Mapping
Case Studies:
East Java
Visit our website: http://openstreetmap.id
Follow the tweets: @OSM_ID & @HOTOSM_ID
Or reach us through e-mail: team.id@hotosm.org
Thank you!

Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team and Disaster Risk Reduction

Editor's Notes

  • #4 The first time though it really got big attention was after the earthquake in Haiti in 2010. On the left is a before picture of Port-au-Prince on the left is an after only a couple weeks later. The problem in Haiti was compounded by the fact that the National Mapping Agency office was destroyed from the earthquake and it wasn’t clear immediately where the backup of the data was.
  • #7 In addition to the 3960 previously mapped miles of roads and 182,706 buildings, more than 2000 mappers have recorded 13,199 new miles of roads and 110,681 new buildings.
  • #8 In total this covers around 120 million changes to the map, by almost 20,000 contributors across 1,000 projects. This required an estimated 165,000 hours of volunteer work! 
  • #11 Next exposure
  • #15 Creation of OSM tools specific to Indonesia, Separate Datastore, and Tasking tools