This site is a portfolio for GIS and spatial-analysis work, built around project write-ups that explain both the question being asked and the method used to answer it.
The aim is not just to archive completed work, but to turn it into clear web-first case studies. Some posts focus on mapping and visualisation, others on data processing or applied analysis, but the common thread is making the analytical decisions visible rather than treating the map as the only output.
Some of the strongest examples of where I want this to go are Mapping Ardmore in the 1926 Census and Building a Real-Time Flood Monitoring Dashboard for Midleton, where the write-up and the project are designed together rather than lifted straight from coursework.
Older posts in the archive are still useful, but they vary in how polished they are. This introduction stays in place as a simple orientation point while the stronger project pages set the standard for where the portfolio is heading.
If you'd rather start with a more fully developed piece, Mapping Dublin's Air Quality is a good example of the portfolio style this site is aiming for. You can also go straight to Mapping Ardmore in the 1926 Census or Building a Real-Time Flood Monitoring Dashboard for Midleton, and if you want to get in touch, the contact page has the relevant details.