Geographical information system (GIS) application to construction and geotechnical data management on MRT construction projects in Singapore

1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 469-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.P. Kimmance ◽  
M.P. Bradshaw ◽  
H.H. Seetoh
Author(s):  
Mike Pearl ◽  
Gavin Coppins ◽  
Frank Dennis

This paper discusses the application of the UKAEA’s information management and geographical evaluation system (IMAGES) to the development of a safety case for contaminated land on the Dounreay nuclear licensed site. IMAGES is the subject of a separate paper in these conference proceedings: “A Data Management and Geographical Information System (GIS) for the Management of Land Quality on UKAEA Sites” [1]. Nuclear safety on licensed sites in the UK is enforced through the Health and Safety Executive’s Nuclear Installations Inspectorate (NII). Nuclear site licenses contain a number of conditions and it is against the enforcement of these conditions that the NII regulates nuclear safety. Recent guidance issued by the NII to it’s inspectors and it’s licensees covers managing radioactively contaminated land. The NII treats radioactively contaminated land as an accumulation of radioactive waste. It therefore requires licensees to control or contain the material, to record the amount and location of the material and to justify and demonstrate the adequacy of the arrangements to maintain safety by means of a safety case. The IMAGES system has played a key role in developing the safety case for contaminated land and in the on-going management of contaminated land at Dounreay. This paper explains how IMAGES has been used to support Dounreay’s contaminated land safety case by: • recording areas of contaminated land, its activity and its volume; • supporting the conceptual model via 2D and 3D visualisation; • calculating an estimate of the overall inventory of contaminated land at Dounreay (concentrations and volume), and providing output to a risk assessment; • providing project managers with data, which is pertinent to health and safety, for excavations in areas of contaminated land. In addition, providing estimates of waste arisings as a consequence of the proposed excavations; • assisting in controlling activities in areas of contamination (via excavation procedures); • providing a tracking system for wastes excavated from areas of contamination; and • providing the definitive, up to date records with respect to the assessment of land quality status.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masiri Kamin ◽  
Nor Farah Atiqah Ahmad ◽  
Siti Nooraiin Mohd Razali ◽  
Mashuda Mohamad Hilaham ◽  
Mohamad Abdul Rahman ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 90-96
Author(s):  
Andi Baso Kresna Andi ◽  
Mahmud Achmad ◽  
Iqbal Iqbal

One of the major issues in agricultural machinery aids program from the central government is the difficulty to access information regarding distribution of the machines. Therefore, it is important to design and develop an application that provides the information about location of the four wheels and two wheels tractors distributed by the local, provincial, and central government in Maros Regency. The aim of this study was to develop a Geographical Information System that can be used to locate and map the agricultural machinery distribution. So far the data collection process is still done manually. This system need to be replaced with a system that makes it easier and efficient to map the distribution of hand tractors and four-wheel tractors. The tools used in developing the GIS application were Android Studio software and Google Maps API. The system developed can be easily maintained and data can be updated in real-time by an administrator and accessed by anyone through a login procedure.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 505
Author(s):  
David Kammerhofer ◽  
Johannes Scholz

Working with contemporary, monolithic desktop Geographical Information Systems can be laborious and confusing, especially for non-experts. An alternative for a more user friendly approach to spatial data edition and spatial analysis may be an “app-based” web application that is offering single tasks for the user—“micro applications”. In this paper, a method for determining such “micro applications” based on user stories is presented and applied to a specific use case—the case is centered around an Austrian Governmental Institution that digitizes and edits infrastructure data. The results of this process are implemented in an app-based web application. To measure the impacts of the app-based approach, we evaluate the user experience of the app-based approach in comparison to a desktop Geographical Information System offering the same functionality. For the measurement of the user experience, we used a focus group. The group had to accomplish tasks with the desktop Geographical Information System and with the app-based web application. To measure their user experience, we employed the tool AttrakDiff. The app-based web application achieves significantly better results in terms of user experience. This result is confirmed in a discussion panel carried out afterwards. Test persons responded that positive aspects of the app-based web application were the easy and intuitive handling and reduced user interface that helps the users to focus on their tasks without any distraction.


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