New Zealand’s urban planning community faces challenges regarding the availability and accessibility of fit-for-purpose (spatial) data. Gaining useful information about our built, social and natural environments, however, is increasingly essential for making good evidence-based decisions on urban development. Yet, there are visible differences across planning stakeholders and urban contexts in data availability, the use and understanding of essential data, and the ability to integrate them into urban decision-making.
This research project aims to improve the use of geospatial information for the development of better homes, towns and cities. It seeks a better understanding of the nature, availability and value of geospatial information for key urban planning stakeholders to making better evidence-based decisions about New Zealand’s cities. It assesses the landscape of (urban) spatial data in New Zealand through stakeholder engagement in the planning community and evaluation of purpose-specific data availability and quality, and needs and barriers to making key spatial information more openly accessible.
This project is funded by the National Science Challenge 11 “Building Better Homes, Towns and Cities: Ko ngā wā kāinga hei papakainga.
Related publications
Schindler, M., Dionisio, R. and Kingham, S. (2018). A multi-level perspective of a spatial data ecosystem: needs and challenges among urban planning stakeholders in New Zealand. International Journal of Spatial Data Infrastructure Research, 13.
Ivory, V., O’Donnell, K., Schindler, M. (2018). Potentials, problems and possibilities for developing New Zealand’s built environment through high value geospatial information. Kotuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online.