Hi John,
To comply with the import directive, I would like the discussion to continue on 
the current ODB import only. Could we talk about other sources of potential 
imports at another time? -)

Thanks
Daniel
From: john whelan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, January 03, 2020 15:57
To: Daniel @jfd553
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Talk-ca] Importing buildings in Canada

Sounds sane to me.

Are we thinking of setting up a second import to handle Microsoft building 
outlines on a similar basis? Or extending this one?  I only ask since if we are 
doing it municipality by municipality it might be an idea to identify those 
municipalities that do not have suitable open data through stats canada.  I can 
see us with a list of municipalities and a data source and I think it probably 
should be in one place.

Cheerio John

On Fri, 3 Jan 2020 at 15:42, Daniel @jfd553 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Bonjour groupe, mes excuses pour ce très long courriel !-)
I have reviewed everything that has been written on the ODB import (aka Canada 
Building Import) in Talk-ca and the wiki. I proposed changes to some wiki pages 
(via talk tabs) to ease the discussions about this import and the following. 
Now, in order to restart the import, here are some thoughts and a proposal on 
how to proceed to complete the task.

1. Issues with the ODB Data Import
Many concerns were raised about the import. One major concern was to obtain 
local communities’ buy-in in the Canadian context. Another concern was to 
improve the quality of the data prior the import. The following paragraphs 
intend to clear most of these concerns.
1.1. Which data import project?
According to the import guidelines (steps 3 & 4), a data import explicitly 
refers to a single data source (ODB in our case). Discussions about the 
availability and quality of Microsoft or ESRI data, while interesting, are not 
relevant as they should be dealt with as other import projects.
1.2. What has been imported so far?
According to what I found [1], the ODB import is completed for 21 
municipalities. These imports seem to have kept OSM content’s history, at least 
for the samples checked, but many problems were found. In some case, the 
imports brought swimming pools in OSM because they were included in the dataset 
(e.g. Moncton). In other cases, importing buildings with accurate locations 
(XY) over content mapped from less accurate imagery resulted in buildings that 
now overlap the street network (e.g. Squamish). It means that all these 21 
imports need to be carefully re-examined and corrected as required.
For 12 other municipalities, the import is partial, either suspended as 
requested, or because previous imports had already provided most of the 
buildings (often from the same municipal provider). That said the import will 
definitely improve OSM accuracy and completeness if done properly.
2. How should ODB Data be imported?
I will copy the following paragraphs in the “Canada Building Import” wiki page 
[3] for a detailed discussion…
Since the data (ODB, OSM and imagery) differ from one municipality to another, 
there can be no imports at the national or provincial level. We have to work on 
a municipal basis and make sure to identify all the problems and the corrective 
measures to apply when dealing with issues like those I identified [1].
2.1 Importing Locally
According to the import guidelines (step 2), we must not import the data 
without local buy-in. However, and contrarily to some European country, there 
is usually no such thing as a local OSM community in each municipality. 
However, we may find a few local mappers from time to time. Working on a 
municipal basis should allow identifying these local mappers before doing the 
import. I often use this tool [2] to identify and contact local mappers. Once 
identified, I suggest that…
- We contact them to explain our intents by referring to appropriate wiki pages.
- We wait a week or two to let them respond nothing, that they have concerns, 
or wish to help.
- Without negative answers we could proceed to the import.
I first suggest that when a contributor wishes to import ODB for a given 
municipality, he first identifies himself as responsible for the import (we 
need to create an entry for each municipality somewhere in the wiki). He can 
then contact local mappers, as explain above, and go ahead with the import once 
everything settled. For those who already made the import, I suggest that they 
review their work since many issues were detected with some of these imports.
Since there are only a few local OSM communities in Canada, and because Canada 
is large, I suggest not limiting the import of a given municipality to the 
people of the concerned province or region.
2.2 Pre-processing
Once local mappers have agreed, some pre-processing can be done if required.
A few months ago, I developed a tool that could be used to process the data 
[4]. Concerns were raised because the application was developed using 
proprietary software. So I documented the whole process and algorithms in order 
to see courageous coders converting it in open source software. In the 
meantime, and as long as I have access to an FME licence, I could process the 
data, when necessary, prior to make it available through the task manager.
Proposed pre-processing [4] includes:
- Reading of original ODB data,
- Removal of near collinear nodes (simplification),
- Orthogonalization of buildings (for corners having near right angles),
- Tagging of building footprints,
- Providing files in OSM format.
Proposed tagging: In addition to the tags produced by the orthogonalization 
process [4] and the source tag 
(source<https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:source>=Statistics Canada - 
Open Building Database), the name of the Census Subdivision provided in ODB 
data [5] is used to add the addr:city tag to each building.
The pre-processing requires parameters that are specific to the data to 
process. These parameters were estimated on a municipal basis using actual ODB 
data. The processing time increases exponentially according to the number of 
buildings so, it may take a couple of days before the data is available for a 
given municipality. Currently, the proposed pre-processing does not convert 
terrace buildings into individual houses nor it tags topological errors.
2.3. Import Process
After the local mappers, if any, agreed to the import, the pre-processing 
completed when required, we can proceed to the import.
1- Do not bulk import the data! Always use the task manager 
(http://tasks.osmcanada.ca/). Select and open a task square in JOSM. If it’s 
too big (e.g. too much work or request is too big to load in JOSM), go back to 
the task manager and split the task into smaller squares.
2- Load imagery layer (Bing or ESRI World Imagery) and align the imagery with 
ODB data (i.e. create a new image offset) if necessary because, unless proven 
otherwise, ODB should be more accurate (XY) than most available images 
especially in hilly areas.
3- Align the existing OSM content to the image (i.e. after the new offset is 
applied) if required.
4- Currently step 2 and following as described in the wiki [2]. I suggest 
merging the Conflation section [6] here and reviewing everything to take into 
account the current proposal.
References
[1] https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/The_Open_Database_of_Buildings
[2] https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Canada_Building_Import#Import_process
[3] http://resultmaps.neis-one.org (“Overview of OpenStreetMap Contributors aka 
who’s around me?”)
[4] https://github.com/jfd553/OrthogonalizingBuildingFootprint
[5] 
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/92-195-x/2011001/geo/csd-sdr/csd-sdr-eng.htm
[6] https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Canada_Building_Import#Conflation



Let’s move ahead!
Daniel
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