SF cyclist Mat Kladney recently submitted his simplified bicycle map of San Francisco to the See-Through Maps exhibition as a part of the MAPPING AND ITS DISCONTENTS symposium at U.C. Berkeley earlier this month.
News
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Mat Kladney’s Simplified San Francisco Bike Map
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A Simplified, User-Friendly Bike Map for S.F. Riders
Mat Kladney, a longtime city cyclist and UCSF medical student, had such a clear and simple mental picture of S.F.’s bike routes that one day he sat down to translate the map in his head to a map you can view online.
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Take a Beautiful Tour of All the Public Art in the Bay Area
You can live in a city all your life and only see about 1 percent of its hidden beauty.
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Atlantic Cities features Global Urban Humanities Mapping Symposium and Exhibit
Home.Land.Security, a map representing crime and crime perception in San Francisco, was named a notable map in our See-Through Maps online exhibit.
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A Wonderfully Simplified Map of San Francisco’s Bicycle Infrastructure
Mat Kladney hopes this new map will prod the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency into laying out more bike-infrastructure improvements.
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Pastries and Pigeons: A Map for All the World to See
Not only was Natasha’s map chosen as a notable map among other provocative and beautiful entries, she received an Award of Special Merit!
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Encoding Narratives in Maps
In a symposium that raised questions about the seductiveness of the ability of how better-defined datasets can make maps that better capture processes we want to describe, it was refreshing to shift focus to how cartographical arts register an individual relation to place.
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Where In S.F. You’re Most Likely To Be Shot By a Cop
As part of a mapping contest at UC Berkeley, some urban planning students at UCLA created a sophisticated interactive map showing incidences of various kinds of quality-of-life crimes in San Francisco, as well as a 10-year history of officer-involved shootings, showing where and when they happened.
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Where You’re Most Likely to Be Arrested or Shot by the Police in San Francisco
Home.Land.Security. was designed to represent unsafe, threatening, and harmful spaces as experienced by the most vulnerable communities.
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OpenStreetMap: Every Line Ever, Every Point Ever
...this project won first place at UC Berkeley's map exhibit called "See-Through Maps: Maps that lay bare their point of view," which was part of the Mapping and its Discontents symposium hosted by the Global Urban Humanities Initiative.