2020 Global Recap

2020, what a year! Despite it all, new mapping projects keep popping up, thanks to your help! Please pitch in on Giving Tuesday and Global Giving will incentivize our work

Take for example, the Dunoon Postcard Trail above, designed to link the local heritage of this Scottish seaside town to the community's sustainable development. Explored onsite or online, this is created by Hannah Clinch of Tacit Design, who has also partnered with Creative Carbon Scotland on this program on community mapping for environmental empowerment, introducing Green Map's tools to many new people this fall. It's ideal in this era of re-localizing. 

Hannah’s Green Map was made on OGM2, our mapping platform in development by the GIS Collective. There’s now about 25 maps to explore there! Check out the list of features, some of which grew out of our First Fridays zooms with the Berlin-based developers and the global mapmakers. Thanks to your support, this ‘open source’ platform, OGM2 will soon emerge from ‘beta’ and continue to grow in usefulness and versatility. 

Our mapping platform becomes more versatile and visual
Our mapping platform becomes more versatile and visual

Your support also helps us create and share education resources. Check out the important work being done in as a university-high school collaboration at “Green Map as a service-learning experience in a coastal community of Yucatan, Mexico”. Here, the marine aquatecture students used Google MyMap with Green Map Icons, plus three new symbols they created to point out turtle habitats, street dogs and local seafood. Our thanks to project leaders Mariana B. González Leija*, Vianey Eunise Sosa Koh and Eddy Guadalupe Fuentes Ávila (*Universidad Anáhuac Mayab) for their report on our blog, too. 

Yucatan Green Mapmakers
Yucatan Green Mapmakers

We love working with classes, and nowadays, it’s so easy to show up and support innovative uses of mapping and location-based technologies. A highlight was working with Los Angeles’ OTIS College of Art & Design on their entry for PANDO Days, a cool new app concept that mixed our icons, the UN SDGs and symbols already in use in LA County. Our work with the University of Victoria continues, as well, and now we are drawing OGM2 and the GIS Collective into the “Map Shop” process.  

Working with university students
Working with university students

All these experiences played a role in our 25th year exhibit “How Green Is My City’ at MoRUS Museum in New York. The show continues and possibly, more outdoor events will pop up - watch for updates and see how the show looks on Instagram at green.map, too! Our thanks to Alexandra Casapu and Bogdan Szabo of the GIS Collective, Hannah Clinch and Tacit Design, the Yucatan team of Leija, Koh and Ávila, Gina Valona at OTIS and Ken Josephson and Maleena Acker at UVic, MoRUS Museum, Ray Sage, Pair Networks and all who supported and took part in these events!

Our best wishes to all! Stay healthy and thank you for your support this Giving Tuesday (or anytime!). We welcome your support at Global Giving (where every project will win extra support, determined by the amount raised) or via the options at GreenMap.org/donate. Thank you and be well!

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