Greetings from Los Angeles, We are excited to begin work on our migration to v4 in the very near future. HistoricPlacesLA, the City of Los Angeles’ Arches installation, is going to greatly benefit from the v3-v4 migration workflow Adam mentioned in his post.
In 2018 the Office of Historic Resources, which manages HistoricPlacesLA and provides technical expertise to the Los Angeles Department of City Planning regarding historic resources, has witnessed an increase in use of the data housed within HistoricPlacesLA and datasets soon to be part of the v4 installation. This data includes information pertaining to designated historic resources, surveyed historic resources, and resources identified as significant in relation to multiple ethnic/cultural communities within the city of Los Angeles. As the Los Angeles Department of City Planning begins work on updating nine new community plans that guide the evolution and future development of hundreds of unique neighborhoods in the city, historic resources data is being utilized by planners to understand whole communities while also informing the vision for these neighborhoods into the future. The data is currently assisting in the creation of conservation tools that elevate community character, encompassing both architecturally and culturally significant historic resources. We look forward to sharing more of Los Angeles’ progress with HistoricPlacesLA and the many ways our inventory is informing local planning and the conservation of historic resources. Happy New Year! Sara Delgadillo Cruz On Wednesday, January 2, 2019 at 10:19:45 AM UTC-8, Adam Cox wrote: > > Hello Edmund! > > Apologies for such a late reply to this query, because I do indeed have > updates from 2018. > > The biggest Arches project I finished last year was the Heritage > Monitoring Scout database for the Florida Public Archaeology Network. The > HMS program allows citizens to contribute condition assessments on > archaeological and historic sites all around Florida, with a special focus > on sites that are affected by sea level rise. It was a project that > required significant alterations to Arches, mostly enhancements to the > permissions system, user signup, and a dual log in system to accommodate > both citizen "scouts" and state employees who will use the same system. You > can read about the release here: > http://fpangoingpublic.blogspot.com/2018/08/hms-florida-arches-launch.html, > or visit https://fpan.us/projects/HMSflorida.php to learn more about the > HMS program itself. The Arches database is https://hms.fpan.us. > > Near the end of 2018 we at Legion GIS also finished a v3-v4 migration > workflow while working with Hong Kong University. At present, you can see > their new v4 databases at hk.legiongis.com, the Hong Kong heritage > database, and yg.legiongis.com, showing heritage in Yangon. (Note these > web addresses will likely change in the future.) To my knowledge, this is > the first large-scale migration of v3 Arches-HIP databases to an Arches v4 > environment. We are currently working to publish this workflow, which v3 > users can look forward to in early 2019. > > Happy New Year! > Adam > > On Friday, December 7, 2018 at 7:55:54 AM UTC-6, Edmund Lee wrote: >> >> Hello all, >> >> It's been a while (2 years!) since this thread went quiet, so I thought >> the year end for those of us on the Gregorian calendar might be a good >> moment to put out a call for news of live Arches installations around the >> globe. Why not share a link to your Arches-based system here and bask in >> the glory? >> >> >> Ed >> >> >> >> >> -- -- To post, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected]. For more information, visit https://groups.google.com/d/forum/archesproject?hl=en --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Arches Project" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
