Work in progress: data might be changed
The data set contains the locations of public roadside parking spaces in the northeastern part of Hanover Linden-Nord. As a sample data set, it explicitly does not provide a complete, accurate or correct representation of the conditions! It was collected and processed as part of the 5GAPS research project on September 22nd and October 6th 2022 as a basis for further analysis and in particular as input for simulation studies.
Based on the mapping methodology of Bock et al. (2015) and processing of Leichter et al. (2021), the utilization was determined using vehicle detections in segmented 3D point clouds. The corresponding point clouds were collected by driving over the area on two half-days using a LiDAR mobile mapping system, resulting in several hours between observations. Accordingly, these are only a few sample observations. The trips are made in such a way that combined they cover a synthetic day from about 8-20 clock.
The collected point clouds were georeferenced, processed, and automatically segmented semantically (see Leichter et al., 2021). To automatically extract cars, those points with car labels were clustered by observation epoch and bounding boxes were estimated for the clusters as a representation of car instances. The boxes serve both to filter out unrealistically small and large objects, and to rudimentarily complete the vehicle footprint that may not be fully captured from all sides.
Figure 1: Overview map of detected vehicles
The public parking areas were digitized manually using aerial images and the detected vehicles in order to exclude irregular parking spaces as far as possible. They were also tagged as to whether they were aligned parallel to the road and assigned to a use at the time of recording, as some are used for construction sites or outdoor catering, for example. Depending on the intended use, they can be filtered individually.
Figure 2: Visualization of example parking areas on top of an aerial image [by LGLN]
For modelling the parking occupancy, single slots are sampled as center points every 5 m from the parking areas. In this way, they can be integrated into a street/routing graph, for example, as prepared in Wage et al. (2023). Own representations can be generated from the parking area and vehicle detections. Those parking points were intersected with the vehicle boxes to identify occupancy at the respective epochs.
Figure 3: Overview map of average parking lot load
However, unoccupied spaces cannot be determined quite as trivially the other way around, since no detected vehicle can result just as from no measurement/observation. Therefore, a parking space is only recorded as unoccupied if a vehicle was detected at the same time in the neighborhood on the same parking lane and therefore it can be assumed that there is a measurement.
To close temporal gaps, interpolations were made by hour for each parking slot, assuming that between two consecutive observations with an occupancy the space was also occupied in between - or if both times free also free in between. If there was a change, this is indicated by a proportional value. To close spatial gaps, unobserved spaces in the area are drawn randomly from the ten closest occupation patterns around.
This results in an exemplary occupancy pattern of a synthetic day. Depending on the application, the value could be interpreted as occupancy probability or occupancy share.
Figure 4: Example parking area occupation pattern
References
- F. Bock, D. Eggert and M. Sester (2015): On-street Parking Statistics Using LiDAR Mobile Mapping, 2015 IEEE 18th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems, Gran Canaria, Spain, 2015, pp. 2812-2818. https://doi.org/10.1109/ITSC.2015.452
- A. Leichter, U. Feuerhake, and M. Sester (2021): Determination of Parking Space and its Concurrent Usage Over Time Using Semantically Segmented Mobile Mapping Data, Int. Arch. Photogramm. Remote Sens. Spatial Inf. Sci., XLIII-B2-2021, 185–192. https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B2-2021-185-2021
- O. Wage, M. Heumann, and L. Bienzeisler (2023): Modeling and Calibration of Last-Mile Logistics to Study Smart-City Dynamic Space Management Scenarios. In 1st ACM SIGSPATIAL International Workshop on Sustainable Mobility (SuMob ’23), November 13, 2023, Hamburg, Germany. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 4 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3615899.3627930