GIS user technology news

News, Business, AI, Technology, IOS, Android, Google, Mobile, GIS, Crypto Currency, Economics

  • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Submit Press
  • PRESS
    • Submit PR
    • Top Press
    • Business
    • Software
    • Hardware
    • UAV News
    • Mobile Technology
  • FEATURES
    • Around the Web
    • Social Media Features
    • EXPERTS & Guests
    • Tips
    • Infographics
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Tradepubs
  • CAREERS
You are here: Home / * PRESS / Business / Imagery Assists Disaster Response in South Carolina

Imagery Assists Disaster Response in South Carolina

November 4, 2015 By GISuser

COLUMBIA, S.C. (Nov. 4, 2015) — One month ago today, a “thousand-year” rain event hit South Carolina, spurring widespread flooding throughout much of the state.

Imagery Assists Disaster Response in South Carolina

In an effort to address the immediate needs of those affected by the disaster and to document the event for future study, Woolpertcollected perishable aerial imagery as the waters crested.

The national engineering and geospatial firm then shared the data generated by that imagery with multiple state agencies and local governments, including and the South Carolina Emergency Management Division (SCEMD), the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC), the South Carolina Army National Guard (SCARNG), Fort Jackson, the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT), Richland and Lexington counties, and the city of Columbia.

“Tuesday, Oct. 6, two days after the largest rainfall event ever recorded in the midlands of South Carolina, Woolpert conducted an aerial imagery flight of the hardest hit area,” said Maj. Bryan B. Tolar of SCARNG. “The resulting imagery was uploaded to a website created and hosted by Woolpert at its Dayton, Ohio, headquarters the next day.”

Tolar said the website helped local governments respond to road and dam failures, assisted in briefing ranking officials on the situation and provided valuable information to the general public via the SCEMD website.

Dr. Patrick Bresnahan, geospatial information officer for Richland County, said the imagery provided by Woolpert was valuable immediately.

“I am so thankful for getting that call from (Woolpert) and for what was provided,” Bresnahan said. “Having lived through a natural disaster, I learned it was the corporate citizens who were there first. Woolpert, Google—there was no paperwork, and (they) were there. It was a huge resource to have it immediately, instead of dragging this thing out.”

Woolpert has offices in Columbia, Mt. Pleasant and Greenville, S.C.

“Because of their S.C. roots and their understanding of the situation, Woolpert provided this service and product on their own initiative and at their own expense,” Tolar said. “Woolpert decided to conduct the flight, delineated the flight area with input from SCEMD, flew the area, flew back to Dayton, Ohio, downloaded and processed the data, designed and built the website, and went live in a span of 36 hours.”

Project Director Brian Bates, who managed Woolpert’s effort in Columbia, said the company felt the need to provide assistance where it could.

“South Carolina has been good to Woolpert for the past 20 years, and this was our opportunity to give something back,” Bates said. “We had the ability to do it, and we had the resources. If we had a chainsaw and that was needed to help our neighbor, we’d use a chainsaw. We had an airplane, so we used an airplane.”

Bresnahan said the technology employed via the cloud, which housed the imagery away from impacted areas, and the mobile app were key to the use of the imagery.

“The Woolpert app worked and was very much needed since everybody’s out in the field,” he said. “Having that imagery tool, before and after the event, has been great. It has been used every day and continues to be a key part of our recovery efforts.”

For more information, visit woolpert.com/sc-flooding.

About Woolpert
Woolpert is a national architecture, engineering and geospatial (AEG) firm that delivers value to clients by strategically blending engineering excellence with leading-edge technology and geospatial applications. With a dynamic R&D department, Woolpert works with inventive business partners like Google; operates a fleet of planes, sensors and unmanned aerial systems (UAS); and continually pushes industry boundaries by working with advanced water technologies, asset management, Building Information Modeling (BIM) and sustainable design. Woolpert’s mission is to help its clients progress—and become more progressive. For over 100 years and with more than 25 offices across the United States, Woolpert serves the needs of federal, state and local governments; private and public companies and universities; energy and transportation departments; and the United States Armed Forces. For more information, visitwoolpert.com or call 937-531-1258.

Filed Under: Business, Earth Imaging - Remote Sensing Tagged With: South Carolina

Editor’s Picks

10 Question GeoGeek Rapidfire – Ted Florence @Avenza

Device Spotlight – Trimble R1 GNSS Receiver

Trimble Obtains Exemption to Operate its Unmanned Aircraft System

Prestigious Award Win For Local Crowd Funded Start Up Business

See More Editor's Picks...

Recent Industry News

Why Bathroom Renovation Services Often Change More Than Just the Bathroom

May 20, 2026 By GISuser

The Drift Between Early Notes and Final Case Files in Abuse-Related Legal Support

April 29, 2026 By GISuser

Aerial Surveys Int’l and Global Marketing Insights to Present GEOINT 2026 Workshop on Multi-Domain Geospatial Fusion for Automated Infrastructure Monitoring

April 24, 2026 By GISuser

Why Timing Matters More Than You Think With Spray Seal (And Why People Often Get It Slightly Wrong)

April 22, 2026 By GISuser

Hot News

State of Data Science Report – AI and Open Source at Work

HERE and AWS Collaborate on New HERE AI Mapping Solutions

Virtual Surveyor Adds Productivity Tools to Mid-Level Smart Drone Surveying Software Plan

Categories

Copyright gletham Communications 2015 - 2026

Go to mobile version