Oregon Wildland Urban Interface
State of Oregon
@usgov.state_of_oregon_oregon_wildland_urban_interface
State of Oregon
@usgov.state_of_oregon_oregon_wildland_urban_interface
Overview
ORS 477.490 requires Oregon Sate University (OSU) and the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) to develop a statewide wildland-urban interface (WUI) map that will be used in conjunction with the statewide wildfire hazard map (ORS 477.490) by the Oregon State Fire Marshal to determine on which properties defensible space standards apply (ORS 476.392) and by the Building Codes Division to determine to which structures home hardening building codes apply (ORS 455.612).
Rules directing development of the WUI are listed in OAR-629-044-1011 and 629-044-1016. A comprehensive description of datasets and geospatial processing is available at https://hazardmap.forestry.oregonstate.edu/understand-map. The official statewide WUI map is available on the Oregon Wildfire Risk Explorer at https://tools.oregonexplorer.info/viewer/wildfire.
Following is an overview of the data and methods used develop the statewide WUI map.
Wildland-Urban Interface
Creating a statewide map of the WUI involved two general steps. First, we determined which parts of Oregon met the minimum building density requirements to be classified as WUI. Second, for those areas that met the minimum building density threshold, we evaluated the amount and proximity of wildland or vegetative fuels. Following is a summary of geospatial tasks used to create the WUI.
1. Compile statewide tax lots.
2. Map all eligible structures and other human development.
3. Simplify structure dataset to no more than one structure per tax lot
4. Calculate structure density and identify all areas with greater than one structure per 40 acres
5. Add urban growth boundaries to all the areas that meet the density requirements from the previous step.
2. Classify WUI based on amount and proximity of fuel. The WUI is also defined by the density and proximity of wildland and vegetative fuels (“fuels”). By including density and proximity of fuels in the definition of the WUI, the urban core is excluded, and the focus is placed on those areas with sufficient building density and sufficient fuels to facilitate a WUI conflagration. Consistent with national standards, we further classified the WUI into three general classes to inform effective risk management strategies. The following describes how we refined the potential WUI output from step one into the fina
Organization: State of Oregon
Last updated: 2025-02-07T23:08:41.130055
Tags: odf, oregon, risk, wildfire, wui
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