Leigh Dodds won Most Educational prize (£150) by using R to show the effects of wind, time of day and seasonality on pollution in Bath.
AirLapse is a timelapse visualisation of air quality in Bath and won two hack prizes: Best Visualisation (£150) and Best Shipped (£150).
Dave Rowe made an improved version of the current council air quality website, using live data and dynamic charting.
BANES have made their air quality data public and are funding a hack to find innovative ways to use it.
Thanks again to everyone who came along to The Guild last night to take a first look at our new data store. The link you’ve all been waiting for is at: https://data.bathhacked.org/ The jewel in the crown right now is… Continue Reading →
We learned a huge amount from our first hack back in March, not least the mountains that need to be climbed to put open data at the heart of our city. What followed over the last few months has been… Continue Reading →
by Mark Owen and Duncan Barclay (£1000 Grand Prize Winner) What we made A tool for exploring data & provoking conversations. Why we made it With so many datasets on offer, we were interested in exploring commonalities between them and… Continue Reading →
by Jack Franklin, Ollie Marshall, Ollie Jennings and Carl Holloway (£250 Best Completed Project Award + £250 Hacker’s Choice Award) What we made Road Reporter, an insight into the standard of living in the City of Bath. Why we made… Continue Reading →
by Takashi Yonenaga (£250 Best Use of Data Award Winner) What I made A website that presents some basic stats about tourism in Bath. Why I made it Various surveys and data about tourism in the UK are available online;… Continue Reading →
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