Abstract

This article describes a Los Angeles-based website that collects volunteered geographic information (VGI) on outdoor advertising using the Google Street View interface. The Billboard Map website was designed to help the city regulate signage. The Los Angeles landscape is thick with advertising, and the city efforts to count total of signs has been stymied by litigation and political pressure. Because outdoor advertising is designed to be seen, the community collectively knows how many and where signs exist. As such, outdoor advertising is a perfect subject for VGI. This paper analyzes the Los Angeles community's entries in the Billboard Map website both quantitatively and qualitatively. I find that members of the public are well able to map outdoor advertisements, successfully employing the Google Street View interface to pinpoint sign locations. However, the community proved unaware of the regulatory distinctions between types of signs, mapping many more signs than those the city technically designates as billboards. Though these findings might suggest spatial data quality issues in the use of VGI for municipal record-keeping, I argue that the Billboard Map teaches an important lesson about how the public's conceptualization of the urban landscape differs from that envisioned by city planners. In particular, I argue that community members see the landscape of advertising holistically, while city agents treat the landscape as a collection of individual categories. This is important because, while Los Angeles recently banned new off-site signs, it continues to approve similar signs under new planning categories, with more in the works.

Highlights

  • Outdoor Advertising and the Los Angeles LandscapeTo outdoor advertisers, Los Angeles is “the largest outdoor advertising market in the United States” (JCDecaux, 2007)

  • Los Angeles has a landscape of suburban sprawl designed for automobile travel, and it is the home of the entertainment industry—factors that led to a density of billboards greater than other cities (Gudis, 2004)

  • This article studies how urban residents mapped the landscape of off-site signs in Los Angeles and, as such, is positioned within the emerging field of volunteered geographic information (VGI) and its concern with the quality of spatial data created by non-professionals

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Los Angeles is “the largest outdoor advertising market in the United States” (JCDecaux, 2007). In 2002, the City of Los Angeles made two important steps toward regulating signage It banned new off-site signs, and it created the Off-Site Sign Periodic Inspection Program, which charged the Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) with creating a comprehensive inventory of existing off-site signs. This article studies how urban residents mapped the landscape of off-site signs in Los Angeles and, as such, is positioned within the emerging field of VGI and its concern with the quality of spatial data created by non-professionals. I turn to the landscape of Los Angeles to consider why residents might have mapped more signs than city agents, and I find that the landscape is suffused with off-site signs that the city permits under a variety of new categories beyond the categories of traditional billboards. I argue that the VGI map of signage pursuant to this vision of the landscape shows fidelity to the landscape and to the law, and I suggest that the limited inventory created by the city is a tactic to obscure the true number of offsite signs in the city

Literature Review
The Billboard Map Website
Results and Analysis of Spatial Data Quality
The Ontology of Off-Site Signage and the Ontology of the Landscape
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call