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Joseph Bailey 2023-08-15
Turn geospatial polygons like states, counties or local authorities into regular or hexagonal grids automatically.
Using geospatial polygons to portray geographical information can be a challenge when polygons are of different sizes. For example, it can be difficult to ensure that larger polygons do not skew how readers retain or absorb information. As a result, many opt to generate maps that use consistent shapes (i.e. regular grids) to ensure that no specific geography is emphasised unfairly. Generally there are four reasons that one might transform geospatial polygons to a different grid (or geospatial representation):
The link in bullet 4 provides an excellent introduction to the notion of tesselation and its challenges. Interestingly, the eventual generation of hexagonal and regular grids demonstrated in the article was done manually. I believe that this can be very time consuming, and though it may stimulate some fun discussion - wouldn’t it be great to do it automatically?
Recent functionality for representing US states, European countries and World countries in a grid has been made available for ggplot2 here and there are many other great examples of hand-specified or bespoke grids. The challenge with this is that if you have a less commonly used geography then it might be hard to find a hand-specified or bespoke grid for your area of interest.
What I wanted to do with geogrid
is make it easier to
generate these grids in ways that might be visually appealing and then
assign the original geographies to their gridded counterparts in a way
that made sense. Using an input of geospatial polgyons
geogrid
will generate either a regular or hexagonal grid,
and then assign each of the polygons in your original file to that new
grid.
There are two steps to using geogrid
:
calculate_grid
function and varying the seed
is a good place to start.This is a basic example which shows how the assignment of London boroughs could work.
library(geogrid)
library(sf)
library(tmap)
<- system.file("extdata", "london_LA.json", package = "geogrid")
input_file <- st_read(input_file) %>% st_set_crs(27700)
original_shapes $SNAME <- substr(original_shapes$NAME, 1, 4) original_shapes
For reference, lets see how London’s local authorities are actually bounded in real space. In this example, I have coloured each polygon based on it’s area. Brighter polygons are larger.
<- tm_shape(original_shapes) +
rawplot tm_polygons("HECTARES", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
rawplot
So, let’s turn this into a grid to stop places like Bromley,
Hillingdon and Havering from stealing our attention. First of all, we
can generate a number of different grids using seed
. Since
there are many ways to dissect the outer boundary of the polygons you
might want to choose an output that appeals to you. I’d recommend
looking at different seed
values and choosing the one that
best matches the outline that you approve of.
The calculate_grid
function takes in a
SpatialPolygonsDataframe or sf object, a learning rate (suggestion =
0.03 to begin), a grid type hexagonal
or
regular
and a seed value. Let’s have a look at some
hexagonal grid options for the London local authorities:
par(mfrow = c(2, 3), mar = c(0, 0, 2, 0))
for (i in 1:6) {
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes, grid_type = "hexagonal", seed = i)
new_cells plot(new_cells, main = paste("Seed", i, sep = " "))
}
Let’s also look at things with a regular grid:
par(mfrow = c(2, 3), mar = c(0, 0, 2, 0))
for (i in 1:6) {
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes, grid_type = "regular", seed = i)
new_cells plot(new_cells, main = paste("Seed", i, sep = " "))
}
As we can see there are lots of options. Now, lets choose a grid and
assign our existing places to it. I happen to like the both grids that
have a seed
of 3. So I’m going to assign the polygons to
those grids. Let’s do that and see what they look like compared to the
original.
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes, grid_type = "hexagonal", seed = 3)
new_cells_hex <- assign_polygons(original_shapes, new_cells_hex)
resulthex
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes, grid_type = "regular", seed = 3)
new_cells_reg <- assign_polygons(original_shapes, new_cells_reg) resultreg
Now we have an example transfer from real space to grid space - we can visualise it.
<- tm_shape(resulthex) +
hexplot tm_polygons("HECTARES", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
<- tm_shape(resultreg) +
regplot tm_polygons("HECTARES", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
tmap_arrange(rawplot, hexplot, regplot, nrow = 3)
The package has two major functions:
calculate_grid()
given your input polygons this will
generate the grid as specified by your arguments:
shape
: the original polygonslearning_rate
: the rate at which the gradient descent
finds the optimum cellsize to ensure that your gridded points fit within
the outer boundary of the input polygons.grid_type
: either regular
for a square
grid or hexagonal
for a hexagonal grid.seed
: the seed to ensure you get the same grid
output.assign_polygons()
: this will assign the original
polygons to their new locations on the grid generated in
calculate_grid()
. It will find the solution that minimises
the sum of the total distance between the original polygon centroids and
eventual gridded centroids. Arguments:
shape
: the original polygonsnew_polygons
: the output (a list) from
calculate_grid()
.assign_polygons()
why does it only work sometimes?This is my first attempt at a package. If it doesn’t work I’d like suggestions for improvements and thanks in advance for providing them!
I welcome critique and feedback. Blog post to follow.
I read a lot of the work by Hadley Wickham, Jenny Bryan, Thomas Lin Pedersen, Mara Averick and Bob Rudis to name a few. But also love the R community and learn a huge amount from R Bloggers.
Extra thanks go to Ryan Hafen for making this package publishable.
From others:
Simon Hailstone has looked at male life expectancy in the South East region of England using the package. Thanks Simon for using!
From me:
This time using the contiguous USA. Again, I used set seed and chose some that I liked but I’d recommend you’d do the same.
<- system.file("extdata", "states.json", package = "geogrid")
input_file2 <- st_read(input_file2) %>% st_transform(2163)
original_shapes2 $SNAME <- substr(original_shapes2$NAME, 1, 4)
original_shapes2
<- tm_shape(original_shapes2) +
rawplot2 tm_polygons("CENSUSAREA", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
Let’s check the seeds again.
par(mfrow = c(2, 3), mar = c(0, 0, 2, 0))
for (i in 1:6) {
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes2, grid_type = "hexagonal", seed = i)
new_cells plot(new_cells, main = paste("Seed", i, sep = " "))
}
par(mfrow = c(2, 3), mar = c(0, 0, 2, 0))
for (i in 1:6) {
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes2, grid_type = "regular", seed = i)
new_cells plot(new_cells, main = paste("Seed", i, sep = " "))
}
Now we’ve seen some seed demo’s lets assign them…
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes2, grid_type = "hexagonal", seed = 6)
new_cells_hex2 <- assign_polygons(original_shapes2, new_cells_hex2)
resulthex2
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes2, grid_type = "regular", seed = 4)
new_cells_reg2 <- assign_polygons(original_shapes2, new_cells_reg2)
resultreg2
<- tm_shape(resulthex2) +
hexplot2 tm_polygons("CENSUSAREA", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
<- tm_shape(resultreg2) +
regplot2 tm_polygons("CENSUSAREA", palette = "viridis") +
tm_text("SNAME")
tmap_arrange(rawplot2, hexplot2, regplot2, nrow = 3)
Likewise, you can try the bay area…
<- system.file("extdata", "bay_counties.geojson", package = "geogrid")
input_file3 <- st_read(input_file3) %>% st_transform(3310)
original_shapes3 $SNAME <- substr(original_shapes3$county, 1, 4)
original_shapes3
<- tm_shape(original_shapes3) +
rawplot3 tm_polygons(col = "gray25") +
tm_text("SNAME")
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes3, grid_type = "hexagonal", seed = 6)
new_cells_hex3 <- assign_polygons(original_shapes3, new_cells_hex3)
resulthex3
<- calculate_grid(shape = original_shapes3, grid_type = "regular", seed = 1)
new_cells_reg3 <- assign_polygons(original_shapes3, new_cells_reg3)
resultreg3
<- tm_shape(resulthex3) +
hexplot3 tm_polygons(col = "gray25") +
tm_text("SNAME")
<- tm_shape(resultreg3) +
regplot3 tm_polygons(col = "gray25") +
tm_text("SNAME")
tmap_arrange(rawplot3, hexplot3, regplot3, nrow = 3)
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