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U.S. NAVY IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SDSFIE DATA STANDARDS
Darrell RobertsonGeoReadiness Program ManagerInstallation GeoSpatial Information and Services (IGI&S)United States Navy, NAVFAC AM4
Ed RiegelmannChief Geospatial OfficerCritigen
Esri Federal GIS Conference, February 23, 2012
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GeoReadiness Program Background
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GeoReadiness Program Mission & Vision
MissionGeoReadiness delivers, maintains, and provides access to authoritative geospatial data to improve situational awareness and strengthen decision-making at Navy shore and expeditionary installations.
VisionNavy users empowered with easy access to precise and up-to-date geospatial information, delivered from a common data and technology foundation connected to location-enabled Navy systems and enhanced decision support tools for contingency, consequence and facilities management of Navy shore and expeditionary missions.
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Navy’s Shore Installation Enterprise
• 11 Regions with 70 Installations
• 32,000 Buildings, 130 Airfields, and 244 Piers
• 2.1 Million Acres of Land
• 110,000 Plus Facilities Valued Greater Than $135 billion, with over 525 Million square feet of functional space
• 570,000 Active Duty, Reserve and Civilian Navy Personnel, Contractors and Various Tenants Who Work and Live on Navy Installations.
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Guiding Principles
Develop a cohesive community of
practice to strengthen the
enterprise
Accelerate data sharing and innovation
Make geospatial data widely
available and easily accessible
Encourage and practice
cooperation and collaboration
Serve as a central hub for geo-enabled
authoritative data and services
Improve communications focused on the
value of geospatial data and services
Implement and maintain data standards and
ensure data quality
Pursue policies and technologies that
support and advance
GeoReadiness
Adopt best practices across the
community that improve efficiency
Develop centers of excellence as cross functional service
providers
Promote GeoReadiness
outreach, literacy, and training
Assist in transforming
business processes through geo-spatial
information
Become business centric and services
oriented
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GeoReadiness Program Goals 2012-2016
• Goal 1: Establish a Collaborative and Services Oriented GeoReadiness Program
• Goal 2: Maintain Precise, Standardized and Authoritative Geospatial Data
• Goal 3: Develop Geospatial Technology Solutions to Navy Business Problems
• Goal 4: Develop and Communicate Policy and Guidance to Support Geospatial Exploitation
• Goal 5: Secure Adequate Resources to Sustain and Improve Geospatial Capabilities to Meet Customer Requirements
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Navy GeoReadiness Concept: Franchise Model
Locally Owned and Operated
Regional CentersCorporately Connected
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Navy GeoReadiness Center (GRC)
Each GeoReadiness Regional Center (GRC) Provides: A single authoritative source of Navy I&E geospatial Information Overall coordination and acquisition of GIS data and resources Acquisition & maintenance of Common Installation Picture (CIP) layers Quality control standards for accuracy, currency, and compliance Services and business tools via the GeoReadiness Enterprise System System access to enable program managers, activities, and tenant
commands to view, report, analyze and update data Published geospatial data to the GRX Map Viewer Pilot projects and implementation of new initiatives Cartographic output to customers GeoReadiness training and support Business Line GIS data integration
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GeoReadiness Enterprise Architecture
Producers/Data Generators
GRC
AM
EV
PW
CI
DATA AND PORTAL HOSTING
“Publish web services” “Consume web services”
Consumer Requirements
BL/PL (Mission Support)
GRC (Products & Services)
CNIC (Infrastructure/Energy)
OPNAV (Data Calls)
OSD (DSL/Data Calls)
FLEET (Planning/Analysis)
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GeoReadiness Vision Supports Navy Business
• Supporting Multiple Missions… with a Common Shared Information Infrastructure
• Business functions consume or reference authoritative geospatial data, improving Operational Readiness
Facilities Management Range
Management
Public Works
Emergency Planning & Response
Environmental Management
Force Protection and SecurityEnergy Management
Integration with DOD Enterprise
SystemsGeoReadiness Data Repository
Cloud
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Navy Common Installation Picture (CIP) Data Layers
• Foundational layers for our base maps include: Buildings and parking areas Roads, bridges, railroads Piers and mooring facilities Water bodies and streams Cadastre information Military range areas Ammunition storage areas Recreation areas
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GeoReadiness Focus Areas
GRX viewer, web map services,
data sharing agreements, training
Analytical tools, workflows, software, geo-enabled business processes
SDSFIE 3.0, metadata,pick-lists,
required attributes
Reconciliation with authoritative sources,accuracy, currency
EnterpriseData Acquisition
and Quality
EnterpriseData Acquisition
and Quality
EnterpriseData
Standardization
EnterpriseData
Standardization
EnterpriseData
Access
EnterpriseData
Access
EnterpriseData Analysis
Tools
EnterpriseData Analysis
Tools
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GeoReadiness Explorer (GRX)ASK the Map
Access Shore Knowledge GRX supports the Navy’s global mission by providing a seamless view of worldwide Navy geospatial assets.
GRX provides map based access to a variety of Navy business systems and the ability to overlay Navy data with other web based map services.
Enabling single interface access to a variety of data increases situational awareness, increases timeliness, and allows Navy leadership to make more informed decisions.
GRX is available through the NMCI network via the NAVFAC Portal to everyone with a CAC.
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GeoReadiness Program SDSFIE Implementation
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Objectives
• Review the success of the SDSFIE to understand what did, and did not work
• Describe new methods that the Navy is employing to describe geospatial features that better support a multitude of user community perspectives of geospatial phenomena across the shore installation management enterprise
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The What and the Why of the SDSFIE
• What is the SDSFIE?
– SDSFIE = Spatial Data Standards for Facilities, Infrastructure and the Environment
– Large scale and high resolution geospatial data content standards for use in GIS, GPS and other location-based technologies
– An integrated geospatial data model of multi-thematic data content for planning, public works, environmental management, and military installation operations
– First released in 1993
• Why do we use the SDSFIE?
– OSD Guidance Memorandum of 14 Apr 2009
– Directs DoD Components to ensure their IGI&S programs conform to the Department’s Business Enterprise Architecture.
– All IGI&S data shall conform to the Spatial Data Standards for Facilities, Infrastructure, and Environment (SDSFIE).
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Standards Leading to the SDSFIE
1984 - San Antonio Real Property Maintenance Agency (SARPMA) Automated Mapping System (USAF)
1987 - Graphics Engineering and Mapping System (GEMS) (US Navy)
1988 - Air Force Standard Specification Manual for Digital Base Comprehensive Plan Mapping
1991 - Guidelines for the Preparation of Automated Map Data Bases at Army Installations (TB 5-803-3-1)
1991 - Patrick Air Force Base/Base Comprehensive Plan Geographic Information System
1992 - Fort Bragg Master Planning Environmental Overlays Geographic Information System (US Army)
1993 - Installation Environmental Overlays (CERL- Corps of Engineers)
1993 - Edwards Air Force Base Comprehensive Planning Geographic Information System
1994 - Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata (FGDC)
1994 - National Wetland Classification Standard (FGDC)
1995 - National Vegetation Classification Standard (FGDC)
1996 - IHO S-57 Hydrographic Data Standards
1998 - USACE Levee GIS Data Standards
1984 - San Antonio Real Property Maintenance Agency (SARPMA) Automated Mapping System (USAF)
1987 - Graphics Engineering and Mapping System (GEMS) (US Navy)
1988 - Air Force Standard Specification Manual for Digital Base Comprehensive Plan Mapping
1991 - Guidelines for the Preparation of Automated Map Data Bases at Army Installations (TB 5-803-3-1)
1991 - Patrick Air Force Base/Base Comprehensive Plan Geographic Information System
1992 - Fort Bragg Master Planning Environmental Overlays Geographic Information System (US Army)
1993 - Installation Environmental Overlays (CERL- Corps of Engineers)
1993 - Edwards Air Force Base Comprehensive Planning Geographic Information System
1994 - Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata (FGDC)
1994 - National Wetland Classification Standard (FGDC)
1995 - National Vegetation Classification Standard (FGDC)
1996 - IHO S-57 Hydrographic Data Standards
1998 - USACE Levee GIS Data Standards
SDSFIE
KEY
AM/FM Map StandardsGIS Data Standards
KEY
AM/FM Map StandardsGIS Data Standards
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SDSFIE Keys to Success
• A significant reason that the SDSFIE thrived is because the standards were implementable using popular commercial GIS and RDBMS software
– This created an environment for interoperability, and backwards and forwards vendor data conversion and sharing
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86 Attributes(Total)
Catalyst for Change: SDSFIE Uncontrolled Growth
Feature Class: structure_existing_siteDefinition: An existing structure that was created by man, for occupation, storage, or
to facilitate an activity
Version 1.6 – 1996
Version 1.7 (4) – 1999Version 1.8 (4) – 1999
Version 1.9 (3) – 1999 Version 2.0 (3) – 2001Version 2.1 (2) – 2002 Version 2.2 (3) – 2002
Version 2.3 – 2003
Version 2.4 (2) – 2004
Version 2.5 – 2006
Version 1.4 – 1995
31 Attributes
9 Attributes
14 Attributes
11 Attributes
THE NUMBER OF ATTRIBUTE FIELDS ADDED TO THE structure_existing_site TABLE FROM SDSFIE RELEASE 1.4 THROUGH 2.6
1995 2000 2005TIME
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Catalyst for Change: DOD Business Transformation
• Business transformation activities at OSD are now focused on data structures and standards that are built to directly support business priorities and processes
• Common business processes across all military services are prioritized for standardization
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Catalyst for Change: Duplication of Business Data in SDSFIE
• The authorized database of record (DOR) for most business data are the organization’s business systems, not GIS databases
• The SDSFIE 2.x data model grew to include business data that were redundant to the authoritative information stored in separate official business systems
• This created a situation where if data in either system disagreed with the other, both the GIS and the business system lost credibility with decision-makers
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Navy SDSFIE Approach
• The Navy is:– Developing a successful Navy SDSFIE 3.0 Data Model
• This includes input and review from the Asset Management (AM), Environmental (EV), and Public Works (PW) business lines.
– Developing Governance to establish a baseline for measuring as well as enforcing standards adherence
– Actively Communicating SDSFIE benefits to Navy users to support adding new users’ business process content in future model versions
• This approach is critical to the successful sustainment of the Navy 3.0 Model after it is established and populated with existing Navy installation mapping data
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Navy User Community Outreach
• Community of Interest (CoI)– a group of people connected by a common
interest in a specific subject or endeavor. The level of interest may range from passing to intense, and over time develop into expertise on a subject.
– Office of the Chief Engineer Naval Facilities Engineering Command
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Navy User Community Outreach
• Leveraging COIs– COIs include subject matter experts– COIs include business databases/systems of
record (DOR/SOR)– COIs include business system stewards– COIs can expand their missions to include
the exploitation of geospatial dataAsset Management (AM) Environmental (EV) Public Works (PW)
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Navy GeoReadiness User CommunityN
AVY
REG
ION
SN
AVY
REG
ION
SB
USI
NES
S FU
NC
TIO
NS
BU
SIN
ESS
FUN
CTI
ON
S
NORTHWEST
MARIANAS MIDWEST EUROPE, AFRICA,SOUTH WEST ASIA
HAWAII SOUTHWEST
WASHINGTON DC JAPAN MID-ATLANTIC SOUTHEAST
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Previous Navy SDSFIE 2.6
SDSFIE 2.xGeospatial
Entity Types
SDSFIE 2.xGeospatial
Entity Types
ASSETMANAGEMENT
ASSETMANAGEMENT
PUBLICWORKSPUBLICWORKS
ENVIRONMENTALENVIRONMENTAL
EMERGENCYMANAGEMENTEMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT
CAPITALIMPROVEMENTS
CAPITALIMPROVEMENTS
CONTINGENCYENGINEERINGCONTINGENCYENGINEERING
PORTOPERATIONS
PORTOPERATIONS
RANGE/AIRFIELDOPERATIONS
RANGE/AIRFIELDOPERATIONS
NIRIS
EMSWeb
MAXIMOiNFADS
eProjects
CAD
CIRCUITS
FRES
CUBIC
Navy Business Systems
GRX
MCAS
GRX
EIMS
MCAT
SPIDERS
MCAS
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Navy SDSFIE Evolution
AS-IS SDSFIEENTITY TYPE TABLE
TRANSITIONANALYSIS
TO-BE SDSFIEFEATURE TABLE
NAVY BUSINESS SYSTEMS
ATTRIBUTES ATTRIBUTES ATTRIBUTESPK PK PKFK FK FK PKFK FK FK ATTRIBUTEFK FK FK ATTRIBUTELENGTH LENGTH LENGTH ATTRIBUTEWIDTH WIDTH WIDTH ATTRIBUTEHEIGHT HEIGHT HEIGHT ATTRIBUTEAREA AREA AREA ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE PKATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE PKATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTEATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE ATTRIBUTE
SDSFIE 3.0SDSFIE 2.6
DUPLICATE NAVY BUSINESS SYSTEMSATTRIBUTES
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Navy SDSFIE 3.0 Vision
Navy GeospatialEnterprise
Navy GeospatialEnterprise
PUBLICWORKS
FEATURES
PUBLICWORKS
FEATURES
ENVIRONMENTALFEATURES
ENVIRONMENTALFEATURES
EMERGENCYMANAGEMENT
FEATURES
EMERGENCYMANAGEMENT
FEATURES
CAPITALIMPROVEMENT
FEATURES
CAPITALIMPROVEMENT
FEATURES
CONTINGENCYENGINEERING
FEATURES
CONTINGENCYENGINEERING
FEATURES
PORT OPERATIONS
FEATURES
PORT OPERATIONS
FEATURES
RANGE/ AIRFIELDOPERATIONS
FEATURES
RANGE/ AIRFIELDOPERATIONS
FEATURES
ASSETMANAGEMENT
FEATURES
ASSETMANAGEMENT
FEATURES NIRIS
EMSWeb
MAXIMO
iNFADS
eProjects
CAD
FRES
CUBIC
CIRCUITS Navy Business Systems
GRX
EIMS
MCAT
SPIDERS
MCAS
COI Owned and Managed Feature Classes
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Navy SDSFIE 3.0 Vision
• COI organizations will own and maintain their geospatial data standards
• COI organizations will establish enterprise methods for data sustainment
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One Navy SDSFIE Standard: Fit for Purpose
• The One Navy SDSFIE is all about aligning with mission priorities, industry best practices, key stakeholders and recognized standards
• This new approach recognizes existing organizational investments in past SDSFIE implementations and supports the transition to a new paradigm that addresses future business process needs
• The Future: One Navy SDSFIE standard that is widely adopted by Navy COIs as fit for the purpose of successfully geo-enabling their business processes and systems
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Questions/Comments?
U.S. Navy GeoReadiness Program
Darrell RobertsonGeoReadiness Program ManagerUnited States Navy, NAVFAC AM4(202) [email protected]
Ed RiegelmannChief Geospatial Officer
Critigen(719) 337-2472