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RENCI at UNC Asheville and A-B
Tech Celebrate GIS Day on Nov. 12;
Joint Event to Highlight Community Benefits of Geographic Information
Systems
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Photo credit: RENCI at UNC
Charlotte
Visitors examine the
visualization wall at the
RENCI at UNC Asheville Engagement Site. |
RENCI at UNC Asheville and Asheville-Buncombe
Technical Community College (A-B Tech) announce the third annual
celebration of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Day in Western North
Carolina. The community drop-in event will be held from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12, at the RENCI at UNC Asheville Community
Engagement Site, located in the Grove Arcade in downtown Asheville. The
event is free and open to the public.
GIS Day provides an opportunity to see how geographic information
systems work and how they are being used in local initiatives. Visitors
will see a 16-foot visualization wall, an immersive GeoDome and 3-D
visualizations in action as they learn about GIS projects such as
map Asheville’s Priority Places, the newly released Urban Growth Model
for the Asheville region, a multi-hazard risk analysis tool, GIS-based
analysis of threats to eastern forests, flooding impacts and mitigation,
and geospatial climate information viewers.
GIS professionals from local and regional organizations, including the
City of Asheville, Buncombe County, the Land of Sky Regional Council of
Governments, the Metropolitan Sewerage District of Buncombe County, the
National Climatic Data Center, the North Carolina Center for Geographic
Information and Analysis, Resource Data, Inc., and the USDA’s Forest
Service’s Southern Research Station, as well as UNC Asheville and A-B
Tech, will be on hand to highlight and discuss current GIS activities
and initiatives.
GIS is a computer-based mapping tool that takes information from a
database about a location, such as streets, buildings, water features,
and terrain, and turns it into visual layers. The ability to see
geographic and land use features on a map gives users a better
understanding of a location, enabling planners, analysts, other decision
makers and the general public to make informed decisions about their
communities.
“GIS is a powerful tool for turning basic information into useful and
meaningful products that can assist a variety of local, regional, and
national decision makers and the general public,” said Greg Dobson, GIS
research coordinator for RENCI at UNC Asheville and
UNC Asheville’s
National Environmental Modeling and Analysis Center. “It gives us the
ability to assess layers of information, all within a spatial context.
This is certainly the focus of our research center. GIS Day is an
excellent opportunity to share with the community the power of GIS and
how it has impacted our local community.”
GIS is used throughout the world to solve problems related to the
environment, health care, land use, business efficiency, education and
public safety. The power supply directed to homes, the patrol cars and
fire trucks that keep neighborhoods safe, and the delivery trucks on the
roads all function more efficiently because of GIS. This technology can
also help businesses place ATMs and restaurants at more convenient
locations, allow people to pull maps off the Internet, and help farmers
grow more crops with fewer chemicals.
For further information on GIS Day in Western North Carolina, please
contact Greg Dobson, GIS research coordinator at UNC Asheville, at
828-251-6973 or
gdobson@unca.edu, or Pete Kennedy, GIS instructor at A-B Tech, at
828-254-1921, ext. 289, or
pkennedy@abtech.edu.
The UNC Asheville Community Engagement Site is located in Suite 116 of
the Grove Arcade, on the O’Henry Avenue side of the building, at One
Page Avenue, Asheville, North Carolina, 28801.
Media Contacts:
Merianne Epstein, UNC Asheville News Services, 828/251-6676;
Mona Cornwell, A-B Tech Director of Communications, 828/254-1921, ext.
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