Modeler

Weighted overlay is a type of suitability analysis that helps you analyze site conditions based on multiple criteria. Weighted overlay analysis allows you to combine, weight, and rank several different types of information and visualize it so you can evaluate multiple factors at once. By identifying and rating areas based on criteria, you can discover opportunities, risks, and constraints in an area. Weighted overlay analysis produces suitability models. Suitability models help answer questions such as Where are the greatest risks for insect damage? or Where are optimal locations for a commercial development? The answers to these types of questions depend on your input data and the criteria you define from that data.

Weighted overlay with GeoPlanner leverages a special type of image layer known as a weighted overlay service. These services are published to ArcGIS Server and added as items on ArcGIS Online. There are several weighted overlay services provided by Esri and available publicly in ArcGIS Online. These include ecological and physiographic datasets that have global extents. Some of these services are maintained and updated by Esri so your analyses always run using current data. The suitability models created by the GeoPlanner weighted overlay widget are hosted ArcGIS Online image service layers. These are referred to as weighted overlay model services, or models for short.

Understanding weighted overlay

Weighted overlay has three conceptual steps. First, each raster layer is assigned a weight, as a percentage, in the analysis. This allows you to emphasize the relative importance of each layer in the analysis. Second, values in each raster layer are mapped to a common suitability scale. This allows you to compare the different types of information in each raster layer. Third, all raster layers in the analysis are overlaid. Each raster cell’s suitability value is multiplied by its layer weight and totaled with the values of other raster cells it overlays. The result is a suitability value that is used for symbology in the output raster layer.

Weighed overlay example
In the illustration, the two input rasters have been reclassified to a suitability scale of 1 to 3. Each raster is weighted with a percent influence. The cell values are multiplied by their weight, and the results are added together to create the output raster. For example, in the upper left cell, the values for the two inputs become (2 * 0.75) = 1.5 and (3 * 0.25) = 0.75. The sum of 1.5 and 0.75 is 2.25. The final value is rounded to 2 because the output is an integer raster layer.

Add Esri–curated services to your organization

Currently, Esri curates two publicly available weighted overlay services. You can add these services as items to your organization if your organization can access ArcGIS Online and if you have an ArcGIS Online organization. The following steps detail how to add weighted overlay services curated by Esri as items to your organization.

  1. Sign in to your organization with an account that has privileges to create content.
  2. Open the My Content page, click Add Item, and choose From the web.
  3. In the URL field, type https://utility.arcgis.com/usrsvcs/servers/24b7c7752170431a95719323a9e71a5e/rest/services/WRO_World_Ecophysiographic_Data/ImageServer. The Title field is automatically populated with WRO_World_Ecophysiographic_Data.
  4. In the Tags field, type weightedOverlayService.
  5. Click Add Item.
  6. On the item's page, click Share.
  7. On the Share dialog box, check a group, groups, or organization to share the item. Click OK.
  8. Repeat steps 2 through 7 and use http://landscape3.arcgis.com/arcgis/rest/services/Landscape_Modeler/USA_Weighted_Overlay/ImageServer for the URL.
  9. Note:

    This service is a secure URL. You must enter valid ArcGIS Online credentials to add it as an item to your organization and use it for analysis in GeoPlanner.

Weighted overlay in GeoPlanner

Weighted overlay in GeoPlanner is accessed through the Modeler tool in the Explore options. Clicking the Modeler tool displays a drop-down list. You can choose to create a new model or load an existing weighted overlay model from the Contents pane into the Modeler widget. If you choose to create a new model, a weighted overlay service browser appears. This browser contains a list of all weighted overlay services available to you on ArcGIS Online. These services contain layers that you use to perform weighted overlay analysis.

GeoPlanner Modeler tool
  1. On the application toolbar, click Explore and click Modeler.
  2. From the drop-down menu, choose New Model.
  3. In the New Weighted Overlay Model widget, scroll the list of services. Click Select on the service you want to use for your weighted overlay analysis.
  4. Scroll down the list of layers and check the layers you want to include in your analysis. You can choose up to 15 layers.
  5. Click Design Model.
  6. Assign each layer a relative importance in the analysis by typing a percentage in the % text box.

    The total percentage must equal 100 before you can execute the analysis.

  7. Optionally, expand each layer and adjust its class weights. Class weights are values in the layer that are mapped to a suitability scale. For example, Distance to Water has a class weight of 0–1609 and is mapped to suitability value 9. This means that any values of 0–1609 in the Distance to Water layer are treated as 9 (high) in the analysis. How you interpret this depends on your criteria. For example, if you are trying to identify areas at risk for flooding, a value of 9 signifies that an area is highly likely to flood. However, if you are trying to site a new housing development, a value of 9 may signify a highly suitable area.
  8. Optionally, change the color ramp of your design model by using the drop-down menu in the upper right.
  9. Click Save.
  10. On the Save Model dialog box, type a name for your model and click Save.

    The Save Model dialog box closes. The model is processed in ArcGIS Online and is returned as an image layer to the application.

Weighted overlay models provide a powerful way to visualize and analyze site suitability factors. Based on the shading in your model, you can identify areas of opportunity and risk, and you can use this information for real–time feedback in GeoPlanner dashboard charts. These charts show how your design or other feature layers overlay with assessment layers. This view can help you understand the suitability or risk in your designs and plans.