Autodesk Infraworks Training Guide
Autodesk Infraworks Training Guide
Autodesk Infraworks Training Guide
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CONTENTS
Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Autodesk InfraWorks: Finding and Importing Data for Your Model ..................... 1 About Terrain, Ground Imagery, and Roads ............................................................3 How do I retrieve terrain, ground imagery, and road data? ..................................... 4 How do I get terrain data into Autodesk InfraWorks? ............................................. 8 How do I create a model? .........................................................................................12 Extra Credit: How do I retrieve terrain data from a local site? ............................... 13 Chapter 3 About Ground Imagery ..............................................................................................16 How do I retrieve ground imagery?.......................................................................... 17 How do I get ground imagery into Autodesk InfraWorks? .................................... 21 Extra Credit: How do I retrieve color imagery? ..................................................... 24 How do I add multiple imagery files to Autodesk InfraWorks? ............................ 28 Chapter 4 About Transportation Data ....................................................................................... 30 How do I retrieve road data? ........................................................................................ 31 How do I get road data into Autodesk InfraWorks? ............................................... 32 Extra Credit: How do I retrieve railway data? ........................................................... 36 Extra Credit: How do I retrieve bike path data?........................................................ 38 Chapter 5 About Water Data ...................................................................................................... 40 How do I retrieve water data? ...................................................................................... 41 How do I get water data into Autodesk InfraWorks? ............................................. 42 Extra Credit: How do I use the WeoGeo service to retrieve water data? .............. 45 Chapter 6 About Building Data ...................................................................................................51 How do I retrieve building data? .................................................................................. 52 How do I get building data into Autodesk InfraWorks? ......................................... 53 Chapter 7 About 3D Models ....................................................................................................... 57 How do I retrieve 3D models? ................................................................................. 58 How do I get a 3D model into Autodesk InfraWorks?............................................ 60 How do I use a 3D model to replace the building it represents? .......................... 63 Index ........................................................................................................................................................ 68
INTRODUCTION With Autodesk InfraWorks, you can create compelling 3D models of real places, and then sketch proposed improvements that are realistic and interactive. This training module helps you search for, import, and configure data to build a model of your area in Autodesk InfraWorks. Each lesson covers a specific type of data, going in the recommended order from terrain to 3D models. All the examples use the city of San Francisco, California. WHAT NEW CONCEPTS DO I NEED TO UNDERSTAND? GIS DATA GIS data is intelligent data: it has a representational aspect (geometry or an image) as well as information. You import GIS data into Autodesk InfraWorks to create your base model. There are two basic types of GIS data: Vector data is geometry that represents real-world objects and their metadata. For example, a GIS data file for city streets would
contain line geometry to represent the streets, but it would also contain attributes, such as the name of each road, when it was last maintained, the number of lanes in each direction, and so on. Raster data is images, such as photographs. It does not contain attributes, but the pixels in the image are georeferenced, so they know where they are in the real world. When you create your base model, start with the following: Terrain The terrain establishes the elevation of the model. All other data is draped on top of it. Ground imagery Ground imagery is usually an aerial photograph of the model area. It makes the model look realistic. Transportation Roads, railways, bike paths, and such help you locate other features. We recommend that you always include those three types of data. After that, you can add the following:
Water (recommended for realism) Buildings (or building footprints) Other ground data (parks, zoning, parcels) City furniture (hydrants, bus shelters, and so on) Utility data (streetlights, sewer lines, storm-water lines) 3D models representing real-world items (individual buildings, monuments, bridges) COORDINATE SYSTEMS (SPATIAL REFERENCE SYSTEMS) A coordinate system specifies how the geography was projected (from a global reality onto a flat surface) and it specifies where exactly it is located in the real world. You dont need to know very much about coordinate systems to use Autodesk InfraWorks. Here are a few pointers: Do not specify a coordinate system for your modelAutodesk InfraWorks works best using its
Chapter 1 Autodesk InfraWorks: Finding and Importing Data for Your Model
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
native coordinate system, and will transform data into that system. Autodesk InfraWorks can often find the coordinate system information it needs within the data source files themselves. However, if the Geolocation tab displays a yellow warning icon when you import the data, you will need to find out the coordinate system for the data and specify it. If you need to find out the coordinate system for a data source, you can check its metadata. These training exercises cover that. METADATA Metadata is data about data. It varies from data source to data source, but can include things like:
uses standards established by the Federal Geographic Data Commission or ISO. SCALE OF DATA For some data, particularly ground imagery, you may have to choose between data sets that were captured at different scales. Large scale data generally covers a smaller area, but with greater detail (like a close-up). Small scale data covers a larger area with less detail (like zooming out). DATA MAPPING When you bring data into Autodesk InfraWorks, you map the attributes of the original data to the attributes of the Autodesk InfraWorks model. For example, when you import roads, you find the attribute that specifies the road name and map that to the Name attribute. There is rarely a one-to-one mapping. Usually, the original data has more attributes than Autodesk InfraWorks supports, but it may not have the same attributes that Autodesk InfraWorks does. Once you map the attributes and import the data, you can see only the Autodesk InfraWorks attributesyou do not have access to the original data attributes any more. There are other things you can do when you import data, such
as draping the data on the terrain or creating tooltips. Most of the configuration options are covered in these training lessons.
What the features represent How they were captured The time period represented The coordinate system used Attributes (road names, number of lanes, who maintains
them, speed limit, surface material) Metadata is stored in XML or HTML format, so you can open it using a text editor or browser. Generally, metadata
Chapter 1 Autodesk InfraWorks: Finding and Importing Data for Your Model
TERRAIN, GROUND IMAGERY, AND ROADS The bare essentials for a model are terrain, ground imagery, and roads. Terrain establishes the underlying surface on which other data is draped. Ground imagery provides a realistic background for your model. Roads provide an easy reference point for location. WHAT IS TERRAIN DATA? Terrain is often called elevation or topographic data. It is usually in raster format, and includes both a picture file (such as aerial photography) and a world file (locating the picture in the real world, or georeferencing it). NOTE: You can also retrieve terrain data in a vector format. Such data represents the contour lines of the terrain. Autodesk InfraWorks can create a terrain from contour lines, but you will get better results from raster data. Be sure that you download both the image and the corresponding world file, if required. The following table shows which formats require such files.
Digital Elevation *.dem Model Erdas Image jpeg MrSID TIFF *.img *.jpg/*.jpeg *.sid *.tif/*.tiff *.igw *.jgw *.sdw *.tfw
WHAT IS GROUND IMAGERY? Ground imagery is often called orthophotography or aerial photography. It can include an actual photograph or a scanned topographical map or site plan. It is always in raster format, and includes both a picture file (such as aerial photography) and a world file (locating the picture in the real world, or georeferencing. Make sure that you download both the image and the corresponding world file, if required. This table shows which formats require such files:
File Format Erdas Image jpeg MrSID TIFF Picture File Extension *.img *.jpg/*.jpeg *.sid *.tif/*.tiff World File Extension *.igw *.jgw *.sdw *.tfw
NOTE: Aerial photography can be stored in very large files, so they may take a long time to download. Older images may be free, but very recent ones will probably cost money to download. Often a picture from a few years ago is sufficient for modeling purposes. Also, color imagery may be harder to find than grayscale images. WHAT IS ROAD DATA? Road data is always in vector format, and is often stored in ESRI Shape files. If possible, download road data in SHP format, but DXF is also supported. Shape files come in sets, and you must have these three:
File Extension SHP Purpose Geometry. For roads and railways, this is linear geometry, and usually represents the center lines of the roads. Attribute information Links together and indexes the other two files.
DBF SHX
Downloads may also include a PRJ file, which contains projection and coordinate system information.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
HOW SHOULD I STORE MY DATA? Use these guidelines when storing terrain data: 1. Create a Project folder to organize all your data. 2. Under the project folder, create a folder for each data type (Terrain, Ground Imagery, and Roads). 3. When you extract the downloaded zip file, create a target folder for it under the data type folder.
Name the target folder something recognizable, and include the source of the datafor example: USGS SF DEMs. HOW DO I FIND DATA? This lesson will use the USGS website, which is an excellent source of free data.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Websites change frequently. Instructions here were accurate at the time
Some sites tile the data, to make each download a more manageable sizefor example, a city may be divided into multiple tiles. Some local sites link to USGS data, but have their own method for finding, selecting, downloading, and viewing the data. You can also download data directly from the USGS National Map Viewer.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
3. Under Download Options, set the reference area to Counties. Since the city and county of San Francisco are the same geographically, we can select the entire area we want by county.
4. Zoom in to the target area by double-clicking it repeatedly, until the county outlines appear. Select the target county.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. Click the Download link and select the themes and formats you need.
7. Click Next to select data. For Orthoimagery, select the color images for San Francisco. Then click the Elevation header (at the bottom). For Elevation, select the ArcGrid option at 1 arc per second. NOTE: Generally, one arc per second is sufficiently precise. Data captured at 1/3 arc per second will be larger and will not give you much better results. The Transportation results are not listed because there is only one option, so there are no choices to make.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
8. Click Next until the selected items are added to your cart. Check over the contents of your cart, and then click Checkout.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
Your order is acknowledged. USGS will send you an email containing links to download the selected data.
10. When you receive the email, download and unzip the files.
You can use many extraction programs (such as WinZip) to extract the compressed files. However, the built-in Windows extraction program will not extract the .gz compressed files used by USGS.
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
The data source is automatically configured because the data has elevation data (Z value).
Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
The terrain data appears in the model. Set the model extents to match the area of your model. Then, if you bring in data that extends beyond those extents, the data will be cropped at the extents automatically. 4. Click Manage tab > Settings panel> Model Settings on the ribbon.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. Draw a polygon around the terrain data. Double-click when you are done.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
2. Enter a name. Dont bother with schema or model extents for now.
3. Click OK.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
2. Scroll down on the site to look for topographical data. Click the link for your area.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
3. Look for elevation data. This site has DEM files, which are perfect.
4. Click Elevation > 7.5 Min DEMS to see this tiled map of the Bay Area. The San Francisco area is represented by 2 tiles in the lower third of the map. 5. Click one of the tiles.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. When prompted, use the arrow next to Save to select Save As.
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WHAT IS GROUND IMAGERY? Ground imagery is often called orthophotography or aerial photography. It can include an actual photograph or a scanned topographical map or site plan. It provides a realistic background for your model. Ground imagery data is always in raster format, and includes both a picture file (such as aerial photography) and a world file (locating the picture in the real world, or georeferencing it). NOTE: Aerial photography can be stored in very large files, so they may take a long time to download. Also, older images may be free, but very recent ones will probably cost money to download. Often a picture from a few years ago is sufficient for modeling purposes. Also, color imagery may be harder to find than grayscale images.
HOW DO I FIND GROUND IMAGERY? Use your web browser to find and download ground imagery. A good search string includes the following: GIS + data + color + Aerial + imagery + download + [your area name] GIS A Geographic Information System stores, manages, and analyzes goegraphical information. Download Include this term to avoid sites that merely display terrain data without the ability to download it. Your Area Name Start with a small area and expand from there. For example,
MrSID TIFF
As you look for ground imagery, keep these tips in mind: Look for natural color orthophotography Follow links from one site to other sources of data Look for mosaics (titled photos by area) If you find imagery that is in a different coordinate system or projection, Autodesk InfraWorks will transform the incoming data to the models coordinate system. When you download and expand the zip containing the
HOW SHOULD I STORE GROUND IMAGERY? Use these guidelines when storing terrain data: 1. Create a Project folder to organize all your data.
data, you will probably have a large photo file and a small world file, as well as an .aux and .txt file you can ignore the last two.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
1. The California State Chief Information Officer WIKI has some promising looking data.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
4. Select the state first, then scroll down to find the county you want.
5. Click the double arrow to move the county into the Selected Counties list.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. Submit your selection. 7. Scroll down to find the Ortho Imagery section.
8. Select an overview map and the most recent mosaic map, then click Continue.
9. The site tells you the projection used for the data and how long it will take to download. Review the information and click Continue.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
The order is generated. You will receive an email when your order is ready to download. It will tell you the format of the image(s) and the projection(s) used, and gives you link(s) to
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
download the image(s). 12. Unzip and save the data in a sub-folder of the project file, as shown. The highlighted file is the image. The .sdw file is the world file.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
The data source is automatically configured because the data has no elevation data (Z value).
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
1. Go to http://viewer. nationalmap.gov/viewer.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
7. On the left side, click the All Results tab to see both selections.
8. Under the name of the first area, click the Download link.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
10. Select the most recent color imagery option and click Next. This item is added to the cart.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
11. Click the Selection tab and repeat steps 8 through 10 for the other selection.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
2. Open or save each zipped file, and unzip all of the resulting files into a single folder.
3. Repeat the process for each chunk, and be sure to put ALL of them into the SAME folder as the original chunk.
4. In Autodesk InfraWorks, in the Data Sources panel, click Add File Data Source > Raster.
5. Navigate to the folder where you unzipped all the chunks and arrange the files by type. 6. Select the set of JPEG or TIFF images (either one is fine). 7. Click Open
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
10. Click Close & Refresh. The ground imagery appears in the model.
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While the ground cover aerial photo might show roads, rails, and bike paths, GIS data associates information like road names, rail operators, number of lanes or tracks, and so on with the transportation geometry. This lesson covers road data, but you can also use the Extra Credit lessons to learn how to import bike paths (page 62) and railway data (page 59). Transportation data is always in vector format, and is often stored in ESRI Shape files. Shape files come in sets, and you must have these three:
File Extension SHP Purpose Geometry. For roads and railways, this is linear geometry, and usually represents the center lines of the roads. Attribute information Links together and indexes the other two files.
DBF SHX
Downloads may also include a PRJ file, which contains projection and coordinate system information. NOTE: If possible, download transportation data in SHP format, but DXF is also supported.
Look for infrastructure data Check any posted metadata to find out the coordinate system for
the data When downloading road data, look for centerline data
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
3. Scroll through the list looking for datasets and external datasets.
5. Click the ZIP button under External Link. 6. UnZip the resulting file to see the SHP files.
7. Open the .prj file with a text editor, such as Notepad, and see that the coordinate system is NAD83, CA-III and uses US feet.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
1. In the Data Sources panel, click Add File Data Source > SUP.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
The data source is not configured because a SHP file can contain many types of datayou need to specify the data type.
4. Give the data source a more recognizable name. At first, the configuration screen has very little information.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. To make the roads easier to see, click the pencil icon in the Rule Style field and select a visual style for the roads.
7. For the Name field, use the Expression Builder to concatenate the STREET attribute (the street name only) and the ST_TYPE attribute (Street, Avenue, and so on).
Click in the Name field. From the Text Function drop-down, select Concat.
Replace the property placeholders with STREET and ST_TYPE by selecting them from the Property drop-down. After the comma that follows the STREET property, enter a single quote, a space, and another single quote
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
Delete the part of the expression between the end of the ST_TYPE property and the end parenthesis until it looks like the illustration here.
10. Click the Tooltip tab and enter a tooltip. Type % to see a list of properties.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
11. Click Close & Refresh. When you zoom in, you can see and select individual streets. If you right-click a street and select Show Tooltip, the street name displays.
1. Use the Cal-Atlas Geospatial Geospatial Clearinghouse to find railway data. Go to https://atlas.ca.gov/ frs/?group_id=135 2. Download the RailroadsTiger. zip file by clicking it. Extract the file to a sub-folder of your Transportation folder. 3. In Autodesk InfraWorks, use the Data Source panel to add RailroadsTiger.shp.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
4. Double-click the file to configure it. 5. Set Type to Railways. 6. Map the Name field to FULLNAME. 7. Select a rail style. 8. Click Close & Refresh. To see where the railways are, highlight them. 9. Close the Data Sources panel.
10. Display Model Explorer. 11. Right-click the Railways layer. 12. Set the Highlighting Color, if desired. 13. Select Highlight. The railways are highlighted in your model.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
2. There are many links on the home page, but you can shortcut the process by searching directly for Shapefiles.
3. The first entry in the results list seems to have actual files to download.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
5. Click Bay Area Bikeways in San Francisco City/County to download the data.
These files had names that were not very descriptive, so we renamed them to include the term bikepaths.
7. Bring the data into Autodesk InfraWorks using the same methods you used for streets.
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File Extension SHP
Water data is also called hydro or hydrology data. Water data is always in vector format, and is often stored in ESRI Shape files. Shape files come in sets, and you must have these three:
Purpose Geometry. For water, this is line geometry or polygon geometry, but polygon geometry is preferred because it looks more realistic. Attribute information Links together and indexes the other two files.
3. When you extract the download zip file, create a target folder for it under the Water Data folder. Name the target folder something recognizable, and include the source of the data for example: SF City Water Data. You can use your web browser search string, for example, including the following: GIS + data + download + water + [your area name] GIS A Geographic Information System stores, manages, and analyzes geographical information. Download Include this term to avoid sites that merely display terrain data without the ability to download it. Your Area Name Start with a small area and expand from there. For example, specify your city or county name. Include the state name to make sure you get the right data.
In this lesson, we will use data from the City of San Francisco. The Extra Credit exercise uses a service called WeoGeo. As you look for water data, keep these tips in mind: Look for a resources or interactive tools link on the page Do not download mapsyou need the raw resources to create a map
DBF SHX
Downloads may also include a PRJ ile, which contains projecion and coordinate system informaion. HOW SHOULD I STORE WATER DATA? Use these guidelines when storing water data: 1. Create a Project folder to organize all your data. 2. Create a Water Data folder for each project.
Look for hydrology data Check any posted metadata to find out the coordinate system for
the data If data is tiled, check on an overview map to see which tiles you want
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
3. The first entry in the results is what we want. Click its title.
4. On the resulting page, click the ZIP button to download the water SHP file.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
2. Open the .SHP file. The data source is not configured because a SHP file can contain many types of data you need to specify the data type.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. Use the drop-down lists next to each field to map the attributes in the SHP file to the attributes in the model. For example, this SHP file has an attribute called BODY_NAME. You can map that to the Name field for Water in the model. For any fields that dont have equivalents in the SHP, leave the value blank.
7. To make the water more realistic, click the pencil icon in the Rule Style field and select a visual style for the water.
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
When you zoom in, you can see the styled water.
1. Go to http://www.weogeo. com.
Chapter 5 Extra Credit: How do I use WeoGeo service to retrieve water data?
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
4. Enter your information and click Create Account. When you receive confirmation, sign in with your new credentials.
5. Double-click to zoom into the San Francisco area to see the available datasets.
Chapter 5 Extra Credit: How do I use WeoGeo service to retrieve water data?
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Autodesk InfraWorks Training Guide: Finding and Importing Data for your Model
6. The last item on the list is water polygons. Click it to see information about it.
Chapter 5 Extra Credit: How do I use WeoGeo service to retrieve water data?
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