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archlab-space

Gis Site Suitability Analysis

by devasher · GitHub ↗ · v0.1.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install gis-site-suitability-analysis
Description
Use this skill when a GIS analyst, urban planner, environmental consultant, or site selection professional needs to draft a multi-criteria site suitability a...
README (SKILL.md)

GIS Site Suitability Analysis

Produces a structured, methodology-first DRAFT multi-criteria site suitability analysis report from the analyst's inputs — covering criteria, weights, spatial data sources, analysis workflow, results, and limitations in a format defensible for public planning, environmental review, and site selection decision-making.

Flow

  1. Project intake — Collect: project name, study area description (polygon boundary, jurisdiction, or coordinate envelope), coordinate reference system, map scale, project type (renewable energy siting / transit-oriented development / facility location / conservation priority / logistics hub / hazard zone mapping / other), analysis purpose, intended decision-maker or audience, and any prior or parallel analyses to align with.

  2. Suitability objective definition — Ask: what does "suitable" mean for this project? Confirm the optimization goal (e.g., maximize solar exposure while minimizing environmental conflict; minimize travel time while maximizing workforce access). Produce a one-paragraph Suitability Objective Statement for inclusion in the report.

  3. Criteria definition — For each suitability criterion, collect: criterion name, rationale (why it matters for this project type), data layer(s) used (name, source, resolution or scale, vintage date), criterion type (exclusion / scored), scoring logic (e.g., distance decay, binary reclassification, reclassified raster), and weight. Offer a standard starter criteria set by project type if the user wants a template. Organize all criteria into a criteria framework table.

  4. Exclusion screening — Identify absolute exclusion layers (binary / Boolean) that remove parcels or cells from the analysis entirely before weighted scoring: protected areas, floodways, existing developed land, restricted ownership, utility easements, etc. Produce an Exclusion Layer Summary table.

  5. Weighted overlay methodology — Document: scoring schema (1–5 or 0–100 scale), normalization method, weight assignment rationale (equal weights / AHP / stakeholder-consensus process), final composite score formula. Ask whether sensitivity analysis was performed; if so, collect results. If not, flag it as strongly recommended and offer to draft a sensitivity analysis plan.

  6. Data source documentation — Produce a data catalog table: Layer Name | Source Organization | Date | Resolution | Format | Projection | Known Limitations. Highlight any layers with accuracy limitations, projection mismatches, or temporal gaps that could affect results.

  7. Results and interpretation — Ask the user to describe or provide results: top-scoring zones or parcels, area by suitability tier (High / Moderate / Low / Excluded), spatial distribution patterns, key constraint areas, and any anomalies. Draft a results narrative paragraph and a suitability area summary table. Do not invent spatial results — if the analysis has not been run, produce a results section template with placeholders and flag it clearly.

  8. Limitations and uncertainty — Document standard caveats: data resolution limits, projection distortion, temporal mismatch between layers, criteria omitted due to data availability, sensitivity of results to weight assumptions, and the requirement for field verification of high-suitability areas before any site commitment.

  9. DRAFT report assembly — Produce the full report with: executive summary, project description, suitability objective statement, criteria framework table, exclusion layer summary, weighted overlay methodology, data catalog, results narrative and area summary table, limitations, and next-steps recommendations. End with an unsigned GIS analyst / project manager review block.

Key Rules

  • Never claim a suitability score is a regulatory determination, environmental clearance, or zoning approval — always label results as a DRAFT planning and decision-support aid.
  • Never omit a data source — label any user-provided layer without a public citation as "Source: User-provided; independent verification recommended."
  • If criteria weights do not sum correctly or appear inconsistent, flag immediately and ask the user to confirm before continuing.
  • Ask one topic at a time when building the criteria table — do not request all criteria attributes in a single question.
  • Flag explicitly if a critical layer (land ownership, protected areas, infrastructure buffers) is absent from the criteria set — recommend adding it or documenting the omission with rationale.
  • Always include a sensitivity analysis recommendation in every report that uses subjective weight assignments.
  • Do not produce results statistics (area calculations, parcel counts) without explicit confirmation from the user that the analysis has been run — use placeholder templates instead.

Output Format

GIS SITE SUITABILITY ANALYSIS REPORT — DRAFT
Project: [Name] | Study Area: [Description] | Date: [Date]
Analyst: [Name / Role] | CRS: [Coordinate Reference System]
DRAFT — For analyst and stakeholder review.
Not a regulatory, permitting, or environmental clearance determination.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
[3–4 sentences: objective, top criteria, highest-suitability areas, key constraints]

1. PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND OBJECTIVE
[Study area, purpose, audience, Suitability Objective Statement]

2. CRITERIA FRAMEWORK
[Table: Criterion | Layer | Type | Scoring Logic | Weight | Rationale]

3. EXCLUSION LAYERS
[Table: Layer | Source | Rationale | Area Excluded (if known)]

4. WEIGHTED OVERLAY METHODOLOGY
[Scoring schema | Normalization method | Composite score formula]

5. DATA CATALOG
[Table: Layer | Source | Date | Resolution | Format | Known Limitations]

6. RESULTS
[Suitability area summary table + narrative paragraph]
[Or: PLACEHOLDER — analysis not yet run; populate after GIS processing]

7. LIMITATIONS AND UNCERTAINTY
[Bulleted list]

8. NEXT STEPS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
[Field validation plan | Stakeholder review process | Sensitivity analysis recommendation]

REVIEW BLOCK
This DRAFT suitability analysis is a planning and decision-support aid.
Results require field verification and professional review before use in
regulatory, investment, or permitting decisions.
GIS Analyst / PM: ________________ Date: ________

Feedback

Surface the contribution link only if the user expresses an unmet need or dissatisfaction. Direct them to: https://github.com/archlab-space/Open-Skill-Hub/issues

Usage Guidance
This appears safe to install as a drafting aid. Users should still review generated reports carefully, avoid treating them as legal, permitting, environmental, or regulatory approvals, and be mindful that GIS project details or site-selection data may be sensitive if shared in prompts.
Capability Tags
crypto
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The artifacts consistently describe a GIS multi-criteria site suitability report drafting workflow, including criteria, data sources, weighted overlay methodology, results placeholders, limitations, and review language.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions are scoped to asking the user for project and GIS analysis details, producing a draft report, avoiding invented results, and clearly warning that outputs are not regulatory or permitting determinations.
Install Mechanism
The package contains only markdown files with no declared dependencies, scripts, install hooks, or executable components.
Credentials
The skill does not request local filesystem access, credentials, account sessions, broad indexing, or network use beyond a disclosed feedback link.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background execution, privilege escalation, mutation authority, or external data transmission behavior is present in the artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install gis-site-suitability-analysis
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /gis-site-suitability-analysis
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v0.1.0
Initial release. Drafts a multi-criteria site suitability analysis report covering criteria framework, exclusion layers, weighted overlay methodology, spatial data catalog, results, and limitations.
Metadata
Slug gis-site-suitability-analysis
Version 0.1.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Gis Site Suitability Analysis?

Use this skill when a GIS analyst, urban planner, environmental consultant, or site selection professional needs to draft a multi-criteria site suitability a... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 51 downloads so far.

How do I install Gis Site Suitability Analysis?

Run "/install gis-site-suitability-analysis" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Gis Site Suitability Analysis free?

Yes, Gis Site Suitability Analysis is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Gis Site Suitability Analysis support?

Gis Site Suitability Analysis is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Gis Site Suitability Analysis?

It is built and maintained by devasher (@archlab-space); the current version is v0.1.0.

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