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Las Vegas Water District (LVWD)
For those of you who were fortunate enough to register in time,
the third in a series of 12 exciting on-line GIS
seminars was held Tuesday, December 7 at
GeonetCom.com
This seminar was billed as "Internet GIS for the Municipality" and
was capably presented by Mr. Jonathan Pickus of the
Las Vegas Water District (LVWD). The seminar dealt with
the problems and solutions faced by experts in Las Vegas in their
quest to transform their paper-based maps into dynamic websites
using Autodesk MapGuide.
The initial poll of seminar attendees revealed that approximately 50%
were management and the other 50% were from technical positions.
Mr. Pickus began by offering a brief objective of the project, one commonly
faced by managers in municipal and AM/FM settings - putting into
place a system which will provide a full range of GIS capabilities, system wide, over
the internet. Not only must the system
be simple to use, but it must also fully integrate and manage
the existing water distribution system, customer records,
digital land base, and database records, including the existing as-built drawings.
In addition, the system must be able to accomodate planners, facility design team members and AM/FM/GIS staff.
And, as is true in most
municipal and government settings, the new system plan had to be "sold" and "justified" to management,
who tend to be unaware of the potential benefits.
Another important aspect of the system, certainly not to be overlooked, was that it
needed to be easily updated and modified when
LVWD took over from the contractor.
The LVWD System is a typical Client Side Internet Mapping Application.
It serves multiple users and provides them access
to an interactive vector-based mapping system. This vector-based mapping
system is able to
dynamically generate spatial/thematic queries, reports, and
complex mapping operations, using a simple graphical map-driven user interface.
There were several important considerations in software selection. For starters,
"core" business functions needed to be addressed, existing data needed to be
incorporated into the system, and "out of the box" capabilities were
needed in order to minimize the amount of programming
required to get the system up and running.

Main Function Provided by the System
Live System Demo
Mr. Pickus then proceeded to walk us through a live demo of the LVWD Mapping System
or "Facility View System." The system is based on Autodesk's
Mapguide software and was developed by GateKeeper Systems, of Pasadena, California.
The water district enlisted the help
of GateKeeper in order to draw on their expertise and experience in Internet based
mapping, and particularly, Mapguide experience.

View of the LVWD "Facility View" Main Screen
The developement of the system is estimated to have cost roughly $200,000. This amount,
however, does not include the years that have gone into
collecting and maintaining the existing data. A quick tour of the Facility View System
quickly revealed to me how users can select objects locally,
enabling them to easily produce maps, charts, tables, and reports based on
user-defined selections and queries of the
existing database(s).
The system was developed so that LVWD users can easily map pre-defined views,
accessible by right clicking the mouse, or they may
select from a list of options using a familiar wizard function.
Mr. Pickus was quick to point out that Mapguide provided a number of embedded functions
which saved time and money in developing the system.
We were shown a number of live mapping functions including some user-defined selections,
polygon overlay operations, buffering,
and other spatial functions. All were quickly, and easily invoked and the results were
displayed in familiar summary formats including report, table, and spreadsheet summaries.
Spatial queries generated tidy tabular results, often hyperlinked to related documents,
maps, or drawings. This proved to me how tightly the reporting mechanism has been integrated
into their existing business processes.

User-Defined Selection and Tabular Output Choices
Summary
This seminar was a nice look at a success story. I felt it was a great example of a
web-mapping application that is used by a great multitude of users to simplify
their day-to-day business processes. The Mapguide driven system used by LVWD has the capability
to bring in raster and vector data from a variety of
formats, and tightly coordinates data sharing issues that are common in AM/FM applications.
Once again, I was impressed with the GeonetCom conference presentation software,
especially since we were presented with a live internet mapping demo.
Connections and redraws were relatively quick and there were no apparent technical
problems throughout the hour long presentation.... nice job!
The Las Vegas Valley Water District (LVWD) website can be found at http://www.lvvwd.com
Jonathan Pickus may be contacted at jon.pickus@lvvwd.com
Next Seminar
Be sure to attend the next GeonetCom seminar entitled:
Using GIS to Competitive Advantage
December 14 & December 16, 12-1 p.m. EST
When you have all the information at your fingertips, you have the edge. Michael
DeLacy, President of Microdesk, discusses how North East Optic Network designs
and manages their fiber optic cable network with automatic web-based updates to
gain a competitive advantage. You must see this stellar application using AutoCAD
Map and Autodesk MapGuide.
By Glenn Letham, editor
SpatialNews and The GeoCommunity
editor@geocomm.com
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