Part 1: Final project data sources

During my initial research on data sources, I was looking through all kinds of datasets from sources such as The Pudding, Kaggle, and Information is Beautiful. The two datasets that spoke to me were The Pudding's "Campaign Colors" and the San Francisco Rent Board's "Eviction Notices", so then I got to sketching.

"Campaign Colors"

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This dataset takes a look at the colors of 271 presidential candidate logo designs between 1968-2020. There’s a mix of quantitative (year, hex #’s) and qualitative (name, party, image, and whether the candidate was white/male/used red-white-blue colors) data types. Potentially, I’d like to focus on all variables because there’s not many and I think together they’ll bring interesting insights as a qualitative visualization.

The target audience could be visual designers and fans of political history. With the bar chart, some interactivity could include zooming into the candidates’ posters and scrolling to the right along the timeline. For the color wheel, it could be hovering over each wheel to see a closeup of the poster in a tooltip.

"Eviction Notices"

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This dataset looks at eviction notices filed with the San Francisco Rent Board from 1997-2021. A notice of eviction doesn’t necessarily mean that the tenant was eventually evicted, so notices may differ from actual evictions. Most of the data is qualitative: address, reason for eviction notice, and neighborhood names. There’s still some quantitative data like file date, longitude, latitude, and neighborhood codes. I’ll be focusing on reason for eviction notice, date, and longitude/latitude or neighborhood names. I’m curious if these specific variables will show a pattern of certain neighborhoods filing more eviction notices than other areas over time.

Housing rights activists and organizations could be the target audience for this visualization. For the heatmap sketch, some interactivity could include a timeline that’s playable along with the ability to hover over data points for more info. For the bump chart, an interactivity could include a hover over for more info.

<aside> ⭐ After careful consideration, I decided to continue working with SF Gov's "Eviction Notices" and take my investigation to the next stage.

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Part 2: Final project proposal

My next step was to consider my audience and find sources of inspiration before creating digital prototypes.

Visual Inspirations

One of my visual inspirations was this interactive map created by the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project. The visual elements that stood out to me were the playable/pausable timeline, the dots that would appear then stay on the map, and the big bold counter. All together, they felt impactful given the subject.

Eviction FIlings Inspo 2.PNG

Another visual inspiration was from Alberto Cairo's book The Functional Art is an introduction to Information Graphics and Visualization. Figure 1.6 made me consider if this would be a useful graph to show the eviction notices filed by neighborhood. Maybe the Mission would be in the top three?

Eviction FIlings Inspo.PNG

Contextual/Narrative Inspiration

Every year for the last six years, The San Francisco Chronicle has worked on and presented its Homeless Project, a series of in-depth coverages on the homeless epidemic. What I love about the series is that it humanizes the homeless and inspires calls to action in many ways such as photo essays, data visualizations, and long forms.

<aside> ⭐ My passion is to continue building data visualizations that bring awareness to important issues. Naturally, I was inspired to create my own scrollytelling narrative with this dataset in hopes that viewers will be impacted by what they see.

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Part 3: Final project prototype (iteration 1)