
Beltline-san is the biggest and one of the oldest guys on the block
So, after about a week of slowly building it up, I have the file up for the communities in Calgary. It includes polygons for everything that’s included on the city map up to September 2010. There are probably little mistakes all over the place, and I’ll correct them as I come across them or get notified. Some mistakes are out of choice because it made working with the boundaries easier (for example, I tended to draw borders up the middle of roadways where applicable) while others are simply out of lack of either appropriate data or tools. It would help if I could find more area structure plans or area redevelopment plans online that were kept up to date. But then again, nearly nothing is in a single easy-to-access place, which is part of the reason I’m doing this in the first place.
At the same time, I’ve fixed most of the problems with the Ward boundaries. I still probably wouldn’t be using them for any select operations if you are using a fully-featured GIS.
One other change too. I took all the municipal borders and put them in a single file, while scrapping the individual folders for cities and towns except for Calgary. They will come back, of course, if I start putting up their respective sub-municipal data later on.
Note on the title image: The Beltline had a population of 18,902 as of the 2010 Civic Census, the most out of any single community in Calgary and 210 more than suburban Evergreen. The Beltline ARP predicts a doubling of the population in the next quarter-century, with the plan-as-approved allowing up to and over 55,000! As for it’s age, although the Beltline is a creation of the last decade, the two former communities of Victoria and Connaught (as well as the Stampede Grounds, though they can’t really be considered a “community”) that the Beltline welded together have been around since the creation of the Town of Calgary in 1884.
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