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NV5 Geospatial Blog

Each month, NV5 Geospatial posts new blog content across a variety of categories. Browse our latest posts below to learn about important geospatial information or use the search bar to find a specific topic or author. Stay informed of the latest blog posts, events, and technologies by joining our email list!



Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

10/27/2025

With the recent release of ENVI® 6.2 and the Analytics Repository, it’s now easier than ever to create and share image processing workflows across your organization. With that in mind, we wrote this blog to: Introduce the Analytics Repository Describe how you can use ENVI’s interactive workflows to... Read More >

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

10/13/2025

The upcoming release of ENVI® Deep Learning 4.0 makes it easier than ever to import, deploy, and share AI models, including industry-standard ONNX models, using the integrated Analytics Repository. Whether you're building deep learning models in PyTorch, TensorFlow, or using ENVI’s native model creation tools, ENVI... Read More >

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

10/13/2025

On July 24, 2025, a unique international partnership of SaraniaSat, NV5 Geospatial Software, BruhnBruhn Innovation (BBI), Netnod, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) achieved something unprecedented: a true demonstration of cloud-native computing onboard the International Space Station (ISS) (Fig. 1). Figure 1. Hewlett... Read More >

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

9/16/2025

We recently presented three cutting-edge research posters at the ESA Living Planet Symposium 2025 in Vienna, showcasing how NV5 technology and the ENVI® Ecosystem support innovation across ocean monitoring, mineral exploration, and disaster management. Explore each topic below and access the full posters to learn... Read More >

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

9/8/2025

Geohazards such as slope instability, erosion, settlement, or seepage pose ongoing risks to critical infrastructure. Roads, railways, pipelines, and utility corridors are especially vulnerable to these natural and human-influenced processes, which can evolve silently until sudden failure occurs. Traditional ground surveys provide only periodic... Read More >

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Disaster Strikes Again, This Time In Our Backyard

Amanda O'Connor
 

December 30, 2021 was an official workday for NV5 Geospatial. Many of my co-workers took a vacation day to extend their holiday breaks. I, myself, was working and pondered creating a “year-end highlights” blog that would review the previous 12 months.

The past year has been one for the books in terms of natural disasters. We’ve been devoting a lot of time to thinking about how remote sensing and particularly our software and solutions can help with planning for and predicting disasters, as well as aiding during and after they hit. One of our office buildings is located on the front range of Colorado’s Rocky Mountains, so those of us that live here are ever mindful of wildfires. But we’ve relegated our real concern to those who live in the foothills and mountains, where Colorado wildfires typically occur. Last week all of that changed.

The Marshall Fire in Boulder County, Colorado, started as a small fire several miles to the northwest of our Broomfield office just after 11 a.m. on the 30th. Winds that gusted above 100 mph quickly pushed the fire eastward, and within 30 to 45 minutes, homes were already in jeopardy and the unfolding disaster was forcing residents to flee, many with just the clothes on their backs. The fire’s path stayed north of our offices, but several of our coworkers’ homes were affected.

Marshall Fire

Picture of the Marshall Fire taken from the NV5 Geospatial office building in Broomfield, Colorado on the evening of December 30, 2021.

SAR Analyisis of Marshall Fire

The cause of the fire remains under investigation, but what isn’t up for debate is that many parts of Colorado had their warmest Fall on record, and with only around an inch and a half of moisture over the last seven months, the Denver metro area was primed for the unthinkable to happen. Two people lost their lives in the fire that consumed over 6,000 acres and destroyed more than 1,000 homes and businesses. It also left us all, wherever we reside, with the uneasy feeling that places previously considered “safe” from climate-related disasters are not nearly as immune as we thought.

 

Left image : A coherence change detection algorithm in ENVI® SARscape was run over the area of the Marshall fire using 15m^2 resolution Sentinel-1 SAR data. The data was collected over the region on December 7, 19 and 31. The area in red shows a major loss of coherence (similarity between the processed data/scenes), caused by the spread of the fire (indicating a major change between them).

 

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Surface Motion Monitoring Using SAR Interferometric Techniques

DISASTER MANAGEMENT

RECORDED WEBINAR

Effectively Use Geospatial Data in the Disaster Management Cycle

 

 

 

 

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