Awards & Nominations
Project UMEED has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!

Project UMEED has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!
The Urban Management and Efficient Ecological Database (UMEED) project is an initiative to provide datafor better, sustainable, and resilient cities in the future while considering different ecological variables.Ultimately, the project tackles the United Nation’s 11th Sustainable Development Goal, to build sustainablecities and communities. It encompasses the city of Karachi, Pakistan, and aims to deliver free andaccessible geospatial city-data along with predictions using state-of-the-art Machine Learning algorithms todetermine future urban possibilities and provide proper recommendations to Urban Planners with various variables for urbanization and environmental safety, both.
Project UMEED aims to deliver a quality solution to the ongoing and potentially irregular urban
development problem in Karachi, Pakistan, and various other cities in the world. Our program is equipped to predict city expansion and
development areas, while taking note of different variables such as forest cover, soil
quality, pollution, and topography—ultimately addressing 10 key solutions to establish better urban
planning—and fixing the problem that inspired us to create this solution in the first place.
As inspired by the current NASA SpaceApps theme“The Power of Ten”, the project is focused on proving
the following 10 solutions:
1. Adequate Settlements
2. Consistent Transportation
3. Sustainable Urbanization
4. Protection of heritage
5. Protection from disasters
6. Air Quality and Waste Management
7. Open public spaces
8. Clean Water and Sanitation
9. Affordable and Clean Energy
10. Good Health and Well-being
In addition, we want to emphasize the fact that some cities, specifically Karachi in this case, do not have
much data on disaster-prone areas. We believe that urban risk planning and disaster resilience are the
backbones of any city. After all, it doesn’t matter how many buildings you erect, if people didn’t plan them
against disasters, it will all come crashing down.
Project UMEED hopes to lessen this danger by including risk-planning in its program and providing
everyone a medium that allows them to easily access its contents without paywalls or data crunching, as
well as giving opportunities for public and private sectors to develop the city to become safer and more
resilient.
Our Project, which currently is in Pilot Stage, uses the service of Google Earth to display and visualize its datasets due to several limitations, including the KMZ file for our project which requires to be downloaded and opened in the Google Earth Pro Desktop Application We plan to transfer our project to a Web Application afterward, accessible to any device, with its own standalone domain without the use of any third-party service for the sake of Accessibility.
The project was created with the help of the following programs and sources:
Data sources, collection, and sorting:
To predict future Urban Expansion Probabilities:
For the A.I. Model:
For the website and web app:
While considered as one of the world’s megacities, Karachi, Pakistan—the pilot area of this project, as well
as my hometown—is infamous for its urban planning, or at least its lack thereof.
Since I was a kid, I have seen a variety of events that have proved that urban management is the most
important part of city maintenance and future prosperity, in Karachi and other cities of the world. Karachi
has been the victim of poor urban planning and ad hoc governing since the Partition of India, wherein 75%
of the 340,000 Muslims who migrated to Pakistan headed to Karachi due to its business opportunities.
Since then, the population boom caused urban planning and development to go haywire.
Construction and land development has continued to be largely uncoordinated in the city, often creating
satellite towns disconnected from the city, as well as leapfrogging vacant lots. I have experienced the
various Monsoon storms and intense rainfall that devastated Karachi over the years. These disasters had
destroyed our roads, buildings, caused thousands of deaths, and cost the city millions in damages each
year.
After some research, I found out that cities with proper urban management tend to remain safe from such
events. And thus, along with help from my teammates, I had determined myself to help my city—and
eventually all the cities of the world—become properly planned and managed urban centers that mankind
can make the most out of.
We used various forms of geospatial data from publicly accessed sources and websites such as NASA
Earthdata, NASA SEDAC, and other Space Agency Data Repositories, gathered and collected them in
hierarchical layers using GIS Software and used satellite imagery from various past years in an AI
Algorithm that helped us determine future probabilities for urban expansion.
Then, we developed our own AI Model using Python and added other variables to consider such as Forest
Cover, Soil Quality, Pollution, and Topography of the area to predict a recommended visualization of how
and where to develop and expand our cities, ultimately addressing the 11th SDG, “Sustainable Cities And
Communities” and fixing our problem that inspired us to create the Solution. We then developed KMZ files to be viewed in Google Earth for our web-
app using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript Plugins to visualize all the data we gathered in a publicly-accessible
and user-friendly way.
Several setbacks have hindered us in the process of making this project, namely:
1. Lack of GIS data from official sources in the area;
2. Lack of risk-specific layers like river networks, liquefaction prone areas, etc.;
3. Lack of Drone data;
4. Large dataset causing problems in the Web-app;
5. The selected city has no official repositories; and
6. Heavy lag during development due to data in GB’s.
We are proud to say that our best achievement is that we were able to complete our project on time and
have it judged by one of the world’s most prestigious space agencies. However, in addition to this, the
following achievements have been met by the team:
#urbandevelopment, #nasaearthdata, #nasasedac, #esacopernicus, #qgis, #drones, #satellites
This project has been submitted for consideration during the Judging process.
Data from Earth-observing satellites, airborne science platforms, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and in situ platforms can be used to address development challenges around the world. Your challenge is to use this data to enable local stakeholders to develop more sustainable, disaster-risk resilient, and inclusive urban plans.
