Cartographic Styles Used in Spatial Planning Maps to Visualise Uncertain, Unfinished and Imagined Content


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Date

2021

Publication Type

Other Conference Item

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Traditionally, maps aspire to be as precise, clear, and unambiguous as possible. In spatial planning, however, the opposite is needed sometimes. Spatial planners increasingly have to deal with complex, multi-layered, and interdisciplinary problems. Often, there exists no ‘main problem’ to start with. Instead, planners are confronted with a heap of unsolved conflicts and tasks with unclear priority (see e.g., Figure 1). Such tasks can range from resolving the everyday traffic jam at a certain spot in the city to planning a new railway through a valley or ensuring enough affordable housing in an entire region for the next 15 years. During the creative process of finding solutions for such problems, planners create maps. The purpose thereby is manyfold: To get an overview of the situation; to play with bold or seemingly impossible ideas; to gain new insights; or to test, communicate, and preserve ideas, hypotheses, and concepts.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

3

Pages / Article No.

107

Publisher

Copernicus

Event

30th International Cartographic Conference (ICC 2021)

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Cartographic Style; Spatial Design; Uncertainty Visualisation; Fuzziness Visualisation; Map Cognition

Organisational unit

03466 - Hurni, Lorenz / Hurni, Lorenz check_circle

Notes

Funding

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