Remote Sensing Applications for Environmental Analysis in Transportation Planning: Application to the Washington State I-405 Corridor
The project's major objective is to demonstrate and assess the applicability of commercial remote sensing products and spatial information technologies to environmental analysis in transportation planning, using the I-405 corridor in Washington State as a test case. The project consisted of six major tasks: (1) Undertake field study in two stages, first to collect ground-truth data prior to image analysis, and then to evaluate the image-analysis results against the "real-world." (2) Compile and evaluate available image data and fuse these data to create the best possible resource for image data analysis. (3) Characterize land use and land cover in the region by using ERDA's IMAGINE imaging processing software and customized software procedures for land cover classification on the image data. (4) Integrate the land use and land cover characterization from the previous task with geographic information systems (GIS) and other data to provide land use/land cover and transportation images, and related analysis, to support the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process. (5) Develop estimates and compare the cost, value, and usefulness of information developed using conventional NEPA-study methods with those developed in this project (6) Document the procedures, analysis, and findings to institute technology transfer steps for future NEPA analyses. The major products of this project include: (a) A spatial database of image data from a variety of remote sensing sources, and derived and interpreted information in GIS format, including land use and land cover information; (b) Software procedures that access multiple remote sensing and GIS (RS/GIS) data sources to derive land use and land cover information, and identify and delineate areas where proposed transportation development might cause adverse environmental impacts; (c) Results of a case study of the costs, value, and usefulness of products derived from conventional data-gathering practices, compared to those developed in this study, based on the assessments of professionals who participated in the actual I-405 corridor Environmental Impact Statement process; and (d) This report, which documents the methods and results of the research, and a companion guidebook on procedures for developing remote sensing - geographic information system (RS/GIS) products.
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- Record URL:
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Supplemental Notes:
- This research project was part of the National Consortia on Remote Sensing in Transportation (NCRST) program, a collaborative effort between the US Department of Transportation and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to foster the development of remote sensing applications in transportation.
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Corporate Authors:
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
P. O. Box 2008
Oak Ridge, TN United States 37831Washington State Department of Transportation
Environmental Office
P. O. Box 47331
Olympia, WA United States 98504-7331Research and Special Programs Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Authors:
- Xiong, Demin
- Lee, Russell
- Saulsbury, J Bo
- Lanzer, Elizabeth L
- Perez, Albert
- Publication Date: 2004-8-30
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Print
- Features: Appendices; CD-ROM; Figures; Maps; References; Tables;
- Pagination: 95p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Costs; Environmental impact analysis; Field studies; Geographic information systems; Highway corridors; Image analysis; Land use; Remote sensing; Transportation planning
- Identifier Terms: National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
- Uncontrolled Terms: Land cover
- Geographic Terms: Washington (State)
- Subject Areas: Design; Energy; Environment; Finance; Highways; Planning and Forecasting; I15: Environment; I72: Traffic and Transport Planning;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01033997
- Record Type: Publication
- Report/Paper Numbers: WA-RD 593-1
- Contract Numbers: USDOT DTRS56-01-T-0005
- Files: TRIS, USDOT, STATEDOT
- Created Date: Oct 6 2006 11:25AM