A 2 dimensional version is rather simple, with a third dimension I needed to think about how I want to layer the different colours. The benefit of actually building something was that I ran into a bunch of questions I hadn’t thought of before. At that point I definitely jumped the gun (more on that later) when I started building the whole model in LEGO stud.io, a piece of software that lets you build virtual LEGO models. It took me 10-15 hours over a weekend to figure out the basics and to get to a point where I had a first draft of an elevation raster for New Zealand.
I knew what I wanted to do but I didn’t know the terminology to look for help.
The first thing I realised was that QGIS was way clunkier than I would have hoped for that paired with my close to non-existent knowledge about GIS tools caused some frustration. I have a few ideas where this could be going…Let's see /AjI917Mwns- Alex Waleczek DecemThe Planning The bar chart shows how many bins for each category/colour. Binned Lat/Lon, coloured by the category with the most properties in this bin.