Do you guys have a dedicated project for the Turkey/Syria earthquake disaster? People are eager to help/donate and what better way than help build along this infrastructure
Well, the Haiti earthquake in 2010 marked the start of what HOTOSM do and since then they seem to steadily improve maps where disasters are likely to strike or where needed for current humanitarian efforts (e.g. there was a project on improving road coverage prior to distribution of COVID-19 vaccines in South Sudan a year ago or so). So I'd argue success is already there, just rather invisible for many people not directly involved.
I noticed yesterday that it's missing all the houses in my neighborhood (South Bend IN). A few blocks over it's complete, but I have some work to do on my block.
It's not new construction. This house is close to 100 years old. It's just never been mapped by the hard-working volunteers of OSM.
It has markedly better coverage in Nepal, Morocco, Central Asia, and quite frankly anywhere I have checked. It has been very useful when I travelled by motorcycle, and I've contributed a few hundred hotels and petrol stations in those places to return the favour.
I don't quite understand what this project does, for example, in the case of the earthquake in Turkey.
Does it designate fallen buildings, and unusable roads? If so how does one access this info. I spent about 10 minutes on hotosm and osm trying to find & interpret Turkey related data and did not succeed. Found the Turkey tasks, but couldn't make heads or tails of what those tasks were, how to view the output of people doing those tasks, or how to contribute.
HOT's Tasking Manager is a platform for coordinating the work of mappers. Only authorized organizations can create projects, but anybody can contribute.
In this case, Yer Cizenler (yercizenler.org) is coordinating with representatives of
local organizations and consultants from IFRC (The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies) for the collection of road and building datasets.
The goal of this tasks is to complete missing data on the map, for example adding building and roads like in this case. Data is then available on OpenStreetMap for different uses. Some examples are:
* View the map on openstreetmap.org
* View the map on OsmAnd or other similar software
* Download spatial data using Overpass or HOT's Export Tool (https://export.hotosm.org)
* etc, etc
The output of people doing those tasks can be seen querying the changes on the map. There's a tool that is currently unmaintained but you can use it to get some additional stats about the contributions:
If you put a date range like "6 February, 2023 12:00 AM" to "6 February, 2023 11:45 PM" and a Tasking Manager project's id (example: 14218) you'll see something like:
Would the state of those buildings or roads be expected to be there? Or is this simply completing the data so people can more easily refer to it in OSM if they want to?
I think one goal is to at least get the state from before the earthquake, even if many buildings are expected to be gone (and then you can just tag the building as destroyed:building=). But you can coordinate humanitarian efforts much easier if you have a rough idea how many people may* still be somewhere where there have been dwellings. At least in other areas HOTOSM have been active the map data has been validated on the ground as well, but that may depend on who is working on that particular project.
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team is more like a sister project to OpenStreetMap. Very open, shared technology, many volunteers work on both, same conferences. The focus is different, some of the funding comes from different sources.
Any python hackers out there? It's a little crufty
https://github.com/google/personfinder/issues/814