rubyfan 3 hours ago

Anyone know if this is commercial buildings only or does it include residential too?

  • jeffbee 3 hours ago

    Virtually all of the buildings are residential. There are 20x more residential than anything else.

    • rubyfan 11 minutes ago

      A lot of them don't have addresses. I wonder if it can be intersected with another data set that has more complete address list.

    • pfdietz 2 hours ago

      Does it include bike sheds? I feel I could spend a long time on that part of the database.

      • maxerickson 2 hours ago

        One of the criteria for inclusions is an area greater than 450 square feet.

        You can look at it in a slippy map: https://gis-fema.hub.arcgis.com/pages/usa-structures (a couple clicks required from there).

        In my area it doesn't particularly identify garages well, so you probably can't spend that much time on bike sheds.

      • sailfast an hour ago

        Only if they're blue though. A true bike shed has to be some shade of blue.

      • oliyoung 2 hours ago

        Wonderfully executed joke. 10pts.

        • gerdesj an hour ago

          You only get + or -.

          I love to see a wry comment being taken seriously too and this one did not disappoint.

cschep 4 hours ago

Desktop computers are amazing these days.

cranberryturkey 5 days ago

any cool ideas I could build with this data?

  • delichon 5 days ago

    A sandbox game with a map 1 to 1 with the ground truth.

  • IncreasePosts 3 hours ago

    An application that simulates shadows at a particular location. For real estate purposes, seeing what kind of sunshine you would get in your backyard when you purchase that house with a backyard in the north.

    • maxerickson 2 hours ago

      The geometry is just the building footprint. You could probably do some sort of estimate as to how likely the yard was to have sun, but it wouldn't enable doing anything detailed.

    • _boffin_ 3 hours ago

      CoreLogic was doing something like this, but line of sight from a window and then be able to possibly identify the scene / view that can be had from that window.