Creating Composite Address Locators in ArcGIS

Creating Composite Address Locators in ArcGIS

Geocoding is a fairly straightforward process in GIS software such as Esri’s ArcGIS Pro.  However, default geocoding locators or settings may be insufficient depending on the type of data to which you have access. For example, if a police department’s geocoding relies solely on a street centerline locator, specific addresses/locations will likely be inaccurate.

Consider the following example:

  • A police department uses only a street centerline locator.  This means any addresses to be geocoded will be approximated based on the centerline information.
  • An armed robbery occurred at 1250 Main Street.
  • Geocoding this offense will result in putting the crime directly in the middle of the 1200 to 1300 block of Main Street.  This is because the “50” of “1250” is numerically halfway between 1200 and 1300.
  • In reality, the address is located at the end of the 1200 block, not in the middle of it.
  • The end result is a geocoded crime that is not wholly accurate.

Creating a Composite Address Locator can help alleviate this issue.  As its name suggests, a Composite Address Locator combines multiple, individual locators into a single geocoding tool.  Returning to the armed robbery example above, a Composite Address Locator could run the offense’s location through a parcel-based locator, a specific address locator, and a street centerline locator, one after the other.  The idea is the highest-scoring match from a given locator is then applied to the data being geocoded.

The following steps will walk you through the process to create a Composite Address Locator in ArcGIS Pro.  Note these steps assume you have already obtained or created the individual locators you will include in the Composite Address Locator.  For example, your city’s or county’s GIS department may have street centerline or specific address/parcel locators.

  • Open the Geoprocessing pane, if necessary, and select the Toolboxes header.
  • Scroll down to Geocoding Tools, then double-click the Create Composite Address Locator tool.

Accurate address data is critical to good analysis, whether it be plotting the features of your environment which may act as crime attractors, to ensuring that your incident data is properly projected so the results of your analysis are as accurate as possible. As explained at the beginning, some of the data to which you have access may be great for one purpose – street centerlines are what you need to drive to an address in a hurry. But you want your analytic models built using any software program or tool you have at your fingertips to be correct, easily understood and actionable by your organization.

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