Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Van Dyke Project Proposal


Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy
 
Van Dyke Preserve-Van Dyke Road Delmar, NY
Introduction:

The Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy received a new preserve in the winter of 2012. The 25 acre parcel in located in the Town of Bethlehem, NY located on the West side of Van Dyke Road. There are only a few things known about the property, such that the Phillipin Kill passes through, it contains flood plains, wetlands, an old farm road, and may contain a vernal pool. It does contain some rough terrain with steep slopes. As of today, there is no visualization of the property to begin any planning of property use, such as trail systems.

Objectives:

·         Map property boundaries.
·         Identify stream corridors and low sections for potential trail crossings.
·         Map old road as start to trail system.
·         Identify areas of wetlands, flood plains, and vernal pools.

Methodology:

I will hike the parcel and identify points of interest using GPS to document coordinates. I will also take stream measurements (depth and width) as to find potential trail crossing. The coordinates and data measurements will be entered to excel and transferred ArcGIS. Arc GIS software will be used to map a professional data map.

Week by week work plan:

Oct 15-21 – Receive a letter of permission to enter the future Van Dyke Preserve, as the contractor still owns the property. Continue to work with the client, Jill Knapp from the Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy, to finalize a project plan.

Oct 22-28 – Survey the Van Dyke Preserve; gather GPS coordinates of points of interest, and current trail.

Oct 29-Nov 4 – Continue data collection of points if necessary, and start processing data into the necessary files for use in ArcGIS.

Nov 5-11 – Continue the data entry, presenting a more complete map of the property boundaries, stream corridors, wetlands, flood plains, vernal pools, and the present trail.

Nov 12-18 – Present the client with a draft of the map for review, and allow for alterations as wanted.

 Nov 19-25 – Finalize the map and submit for client approval, allowing time for addition of any other necessary or pertinent information. The final presentation of the map and information can also be discussed.

Dec 3-9 – Present finalized map to client.

Deliverables:

With the completion of my project, I will have a map of the Van Dyke Preserve to present my client, presenting land features. These will include vernal pools, stream crossings, flood plains, wetlands, and the location of the old farm road. This will allow for my client and the Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy to perceive the land they have acquired to allow for the installation of a trail system.

Data Sources:

·         Topographic lines
·         Stream vectors
·         Wetlands
·         Vernal Pools
·         Property Lines
·         Collected GPS coordinates

 

 

2 comments:

  1. This is a good start, James. I have just a few comments/suggestions:
    *Include a "deliverables" section
    *The methodology should have something about mapping
    *Double check for typos
    *Your work plan looks great
    One more note - before you head out to collect gps points, be sure to make a draft map with existing data sets (like property lines, stream channels, etc.). That way you know what data already exists so you're not taking GPS points of existing GIS data.
    Best,
    Prof. M

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  2. Nice job with the corrections, James. Just a few additional comments/suggestions:
    *For the deliverables, talk with your client about how she will use the maps that you make. Do these need to be large maps that will be used for interpretive sign or will regular 8.5x11 maps be okay. Does she want pdfs or jpegs? Will they be color or black and white?
    *Change: "There are only a few things know about the property" to "There are only a few things known about the property"
    *It seems from your work plan that you are heading out in the field this week to collect GPS data. Be sure to make a draft map with existing data sets before heading out.
    Best,
    Prof. M

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