Atlasomi Geospatial Platform
Automated geospatial data extraction for fiber network planning and infrastructure design
The Problem
Time-Consuming Manual Work
Engineers spend hours manually tracing building footprints and infrastructure for each route design.
Error-Prone Process
Manual tracing leads to inaccuracies and inconsistencies in network planning data.
Reduced Productivity
Repetitive data collection tasks slow down network rollout projects and increase costs.
Our Solution
Atlasomi automates the entire geospatial data collection process, delivering accurate, standardized data from multiple authoritative sources in formats optimized for your workflow.
Simple Interface
Draw your area of interest directly on the map
Multi-Source Data
Aggregate data from Microsoft, Google, and OpenStreetMap
Multiple Formats
Export as KMZ, GeoJSON, or CSV for any workflow
Quick Start Guide
Access the Web Interface
Navigate to the Atlasomi Web Interface to get started.
Define Your Area
Use the drawing tools to create a polygon, rectangle, or place a marker for your area of interest.
Configure Data Sources
Select which data sources to include: buildings, roads, landmarks, or natural features.
Extract & Export
Click "Run" to process your request and download results in your preferred format.
Web Interface Features
Interactive Map
- Multiple map types (Satellite, Street, Terrain)
- Drawing tools for precise area selection
- Real-time coordinate display
- Zoom and pan controls
Design Upload
- Support for GeoJSON, KML, and KMZ files
- Automatic map navigation to uploaded designs
- Layer visibility controls
- Visual reference for AOI tracing
Configuration
- Data source selection and toggles
- Output format preferences
- Processing options
- Export settings
Available Data Sources
Microsoft Building Footprints
High-quality building footprints with height estimates, updated monthly from satellite imagery and AI detection.
Google Open Buildings
AI-detected building footprints focusing on Africa, Latin America, and South-East Asia regions.
OpenStreetMap
Crowdsourced geographic data including buildings, roads, railways, landmarks, and natural features.
Design File Upload
Upload your existing design files to use as visual reference while defining your area of interest.
Supported Formats
Standard geospatial format with feature properties
Google Earth format with styling and folders
Compressed KML files with embedded resources
Benefits
- Automatic map navigation to your design area
- Layer-based organization with visibility controls
- Visual reference for precise AOI tracing
- Preserved styling and folder structure
Export Formats
KMZ (Recommended)
Optimized for Google Earth with custom styling, folders, and embedded resources. Perfect for visualization and presentation.
GeoJSON
Standard web format for GIS applications, web mapping, and programmatic analysis. Includes all feature properties.
CSV
Tabular format for spreadsheet analysis and reporting. Includes coordinates and all available attributes.
Performance Guidelines
Processing Time Estimates
| AOI Size | Processing Time | Memory Usage | Output Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 1 km² | < 30 seconds | < 500 MB | < 5 MB |
| 1-10 km² | 1-2 minutes | < 1 GB | 5-50 MB |
| > 10 km² | 2-10 minutes | < 2 GB | 50-500 MB |
Optimization Tips
- Start Small: Test with smaller areas first to understand data density
- Select Relevant Sources: Only enable data sources you actually need
- Use Appropriate Formats: KMZ for visualization, GeoJSON for analysis
- Consider Area Density: Urban areas have more features and take longer to process
Troubleshooting
Processing takes too long
Large areas or high-density urban regions take more time. Try reducing the AOI size or selecting fewer data sources.
No data returned
Some regions may have limited data coverage. Try different data sources or check if the area has known coverage.
File upload fails
Ensure your file is under 50MB and in a supported format (GeoJSON, KML, KMZ). Check that the file is valid.
Map not loading
Check your internet connection and try refreshing the page. Some corporate firewalls may block map tiles.