There are some people out there who are just better at certain things than you are, which is why one couple is going to find the completely perfect house that suits each and every one of their needs. Because they managed to manipulate data and bend it to that exact purpose, and the rest of us probably don’t know how to do that.
When Justin and his wife first moved to Portland, OR, he writes on his blog (h/t FlowingData.com), they had everything a childless couple might need — access to the grocery store, living in the “center of it all” and being nearby transit to get around their new home.
But seven years and one kid later, the couple needed something new from a home, including an actual house instead of an apartment, with outdoor space for their kid to play and be generally loud and kid-like. Many real estate listings he checked didn’t have that kind of information. So how’s a person supposed to find that in a city like Portland without paying astronomical prices?
The answer, as it turns out, is by figuring out how to use open data to your own advantage, for which you’ll need considerable knowledge to get worthwhile results.
He started by using a simple list of criteria for the location where he’d want to live, and work in other factors after he’d narrowed down Portland to “target zones” that met those requirements. The two he started with — walking distance to a grocery store and a rail stop.
Here’s where it gets into the meat of the data manipulation, using three open data sets: Open Streetmap polygons, Trimet rail stops and Portland building footprint.
I won’t claim to understand a lot (or most… okay all) of the technical language involved in the next steps of the process where he makes his own database so you should really check it out for yourself if you’re interested, but the fact remains that he was able to come up with a map that will probably let him find his perfect house before all the rest of you Portlandians can get it.
Finding the perfect house using open data [Dealloc.me]
by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist
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