The goal of zonebuilder is to break up large geographic regions such as cities into manageable zones. Zoning systems are important in many fields, including demographics, economy, health, and transport. The zones have standard configuration, which enabled comparability across cities. See its website at zonebuilders.github.io/zonebuilder.
You can install the released version of zonebuilder from CRAN with:
install.packages("zonebuilder")Install it from GitHub with:
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("zonebuilders/zonebuilder")Zonebuilder builds on the sf package and works well with
mapping packages such as ggplot2, leaflet,
mapdeck, mapview and tmap, the
last of which we’ll use in the following maps. Attaching the package
provides the example datasets london_a() and
london_c(), the geographic boundary and the centre of
London:
library(zonebuilder)
library(tmap)
tm_shape(london_a()) + tm_borders() + tm_shape(london_c()) + tm_dots("red")
The main function zb_zone breaks this geographical scale
into zones. The default settings follow the ClockBoard
configuration:
london_zones <- zb_zone(london_c(), london_a())
zb_plot(london_zones)
The idea behind this zoning system is based on the following principles:
The package zonebuilder does not only create zoning
systems based on the CloadBoard layout as illustrated below.
The function zb_zone makes use of
zb_doughnut and zb_segment, which can also be
used directly:
par(mfrow = c(1, 3))
zb_plot(zb_doughnut(london_c(), london_a(), n_circles = 5), title = "Doughnuts")
zb_plot(zb_segment(london_c(), n_segments = 20), title = "Segments")
zb_plot(zb_zone(london_c(), n_circles = 4, n_segments = 4), title = "4 segments, 4 circles")
The package also contains a function to create zones based on a simple rectangular grid system:
z = zb_quadrat(london_a(), ncol = 10)
plot(z)
Contributions are welcome!
It may be worth checking-in in a discussion post before opening an issue.
Watch this space.