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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T093000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260224T161030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T151851Z
UID:10001833-1774429200-1774431000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Morning Coffee with the Open Data Week Team ☕ 3.25
DESCRIPTION:Kick off your morning with the Open Data Week Team! \nJoin us online daily at 9:00am to talk about upcoming events\, hear our recommendations\, get a peek behind the scenes\, and say hello to other festival attendees. \nBring your own coffee! \nThe Open Data Week Team is represented by staff from the Open Data Team at the NYC Office of Technology and Innovation and BetaNYC.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/morning-coffee-with-the-open-data-week-team-%e2%98%95-3-25-2/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/morning-coffee-with-the-open-data-week-team-%e2%98%95-3-25-2/
CATEGORIES:Other
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T110000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170742Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T215526Z
UID:10001853-1774432800-1774436400@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Mapping Emergency Food Needs in NYC
DESCRIPTION:Each year\, NYC community-based organizations and City government work to supply millions of pounds of food directed toward people in need through the Community Food Connection Program. Determining how to distribute limited resources to where they are needed the most\, the city leverages data-driven approaches to bring food to those in need using the Supply Gap Analysis. In this workshop\, you’ll learn how data insights can shape decision-making\, collaboration\, and support organizers like you to make more informed decisions that facilitate food security for our communities. \nLed by Ora Kemp and Lauren Drumgold from the NYC Mayor’s Office of Food Policy\, this session will include insights from the Mayor’s Office for Economic Opportunity & Community Food Connection administrators\, whose work supports over 700 food pantries and soup kitchens across the city\, leveraging insights from the supply gap analysis in areas of unmet need. \nIdeal for food security advocates\, academics\, students\, data analysts and anyone else interested in food-related issues and data\, the workshop will provide answers to questions about neighborhood food security metrics\, how need for emergency food is defined and measured\, and how to leverage the dataset to support neighborhood and/or organizational strategies to close the gap. You will have a chance to interact with the Emergency Food Supply Gap dataset using NYC Open Data tools to pose your own strategic insights to support food security.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/mapping-emergency-food-needs-in-nyc/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/mapping-emergency-food-needs-in-nyc/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T113000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260302T165652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260303T212441Z
UID:10001871-1774432800-1774438200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Discovering NYC Open Data: An Introductory Class - March 25
DESCRIPTION:Did you know there is free data about nearly every aspect of our city? Come learn how to use it with the NYC Open Data Ambassadors! Join us for an online workshop where you’ll learn the fundamentals of using NYC Open Data. \nThis training is FREE and OPEN to the public. \nWhat will I learn?\n* What is NYC Open Data\n* History of the NYC Open Data program\n* How to frame questions for working with NYC Open Data\n* Using the NYC Open Data website\, filtering\, and visualizing datasets\n* Useful tools powered by NYC Open Data \nThe Open Data Ambassadors program is a collaboration between NYC Office of Technology and Innovation’s Open Data Team and BetaNYC. \nRSVP here or visit nyc.gov/discoveropendata to learn more!
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/discovering-nyc-open-data-an-introductory-class-march-25/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/discovering-nyc-open-data-an-introductory-class-march-25/
CATEGORIES:Intro Class,Workshop or Training
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/2026-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T130000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260312T231731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260312T231731Z
UID:10001947-1774432800-1774443600@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Drop-in Data Discussions and AI Dialogs for Real World Solutions
DESCRIPTION:This event is a half-day in-person drop-in\, office hours-style session aimed at human services professionals and similar public sector staff to learn about ways that Open Data and AI might be used to help their organizations\, and to share experiences and challenges they currently face. The session will include hands-on activities and demos\, educational materials\, informal one-on-one discussions\, group Q+As\, and design activities. \nCome and say hi if you have questions like these about Open Data: \n\nI want to know where things are. Is there mapped Open Data on where human services resources are located? If I manage a resource can I add to these maps?\nI want to know about local and State budgeting and finances. Is there public information about civic budgets? Where can I see capital funding allocations\, for example?\nI’m curious about city planning and demographics. What is the makeup of our City? Who lives where\, and why?\n\nOr questions like these about AI: \n\nI hear a lot about AI and how it will change everything. How are human services organizations responding to this change? What do I need to know?\nWhat are the risks of using AI in my work? Are there ways to minimize potential harms to my organization and our clients?\nAI is everywhere\, but what can it actually do? Can you explain how my organization can safely identify and implement AI opportunities?\n\nWe will be running activities to help you use Open Data tools to answer questions relevant to your organization’s needs\, to understand AI from the perspective of its capabilities (i.e. what it can do for you rather than how it works)\, and to identify low-risk and low-hanging fruit opportunities for using AI and Open Data in your organization. The first hour will include interactive table demonstrations of open data resources; the second hour will focus on the potential of AI capabilities for documenting impacts and improving organizational performance; the third hour will offer human services and local government agency staff the change to bring their data questions to office hours\, meeting with like-minded colleagues\, academics with domain expertise in data and AI literacy and student assistants. \nAbout the organizers: \nThis event extends a series of engagements and conversations we are having with individuals and human services organizations to help navigate change and uncertainty associated with AI\, and to help identify and realize opportunities offered by Open Data. We are researchers and educators committed to designing and using technology in the public interest. \n\nLauri Goldkind is Professor of Social Work at the Graduate School of Social Service\, Fordham University. She is interested in how digital tools\, artificial intelligence and open data can make the lives of individuals in and served by the social sector better. (https://www.laurigoldkind.net)\nGraham Dove is Assistant Professor at New York University\, Tandon School of Engineering. His research in human-computer interaction (HCI) focuses on helping diverse groups of people design and use data-rich technologies and artificial intelligence\, without requiring expertise in data science. (https://wp.nyu.edu/tandonschoolofengineering-peopleplustechnology/)\n\nThis event will be held in the NYC PIT Pop-Up. Inside the Oculus\, the Pop-Up is located on the Main Floor C2\, in the South Concourse\, at Shop #53 (next to M.A.C. Cosmetics).
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/drop-in-data-discussions-and-ai-dialogs-for-real-world-solutions/
LOCATION:Oculus World Trade Center\, 185 Greenwich Street\, New York\, New York\, 10006\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Office Hours
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T180000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260307T144143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260307T144143Z
UID:10001937-1774432800-1774461600@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:NYC PIT Pop Up: CUNY Open Data Takeover Day Three
DESCRIPTION:As part of NYC Open Data Week 2026\, the CUNY Public Interest Technology (PIT) Lab will host a week-long Open Data Takeover of the NYC PIT Pop-Up at the Oculus / World Trade Center. The activation advances Open Data Week’s goals of accessibility\, civic learning\, and practical use of open data by bringing open data projects into a highly visible\, public-facing space. Attendees can drop in at any time during the hours below for a demonstration of the tool and to speak with the presenter. Most of the demos will also be streamed live from the Pop-Up on its Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/cunypitlab). Inside the Oculus\, the Pop-Up is located on the Main Floor C2\, in the South Concourse\, at Shop #53 (next to M.A.C. Cosmetics). View the full PIT Lab schedule. No RSVP needed\, just stop by! \n[10am-1pm]\nLauri Goldkind – Drop-in Data Discussions & AI Dialogs for Real World Solutions\nThis is a one-day in-person drop-in\, office hours style session aimed at human services professionals and similar public sector staff to learn about ways that Open Data and AI might be used to help their organizations\, and to share experiences and challenges they currently face. The session will include hands-on activities and demos\, educational materials\, informal one-on-one discussions\, group Q+A’s\, and design activities. The first hour will include interactive table demonstrations of open data resources; the second hour will focus on the potential of AI capabilities for documenting impacts and improving organizational performance; the third hour will offer human services and local government agency staff the change to bring their data questions to office hours\, meeting with like-minded colleagues\, academics with domain expertise in data and AI literacy and student assistants. \n[2pm-6pm]\nKierstin Gray – MindHeart AI: Developing Healing Technologies and Consensual Data Practices in the World of AI\nMindHeart AI is a liberatory technology company centering the neuroscience of well being as a catalyst for intergenerational planetary healing. We create trauma-informed technologies that allow individuals to cultivate the necessary awareness to design sustainable pathways to well-being across personal\, social\, professional and collective communities. Utilizing the Systems Based Awareness Map\, the world’s first interactive map of human awareness\, we are building a scalable\, equitable platform combined with experiences that we call MindHeart Activations – in-person events that support collective healing through combining culturally relevant forms of somatics\, contemplative practices\, land-based rituals and retreats\, music and art\, all designed to create an infrastructure of care as a loving response to our awareness of the rising loneliness\, stress\, isolation and depression experienced across the world. \nSasha Richardson – Black Knowledge Erasure Dataset\nThe Black Knowledge Erasure Dataset (BKED) is a research archive designed to document how AI models like GPT-5 and Gemini distort Black history and culture through specific “hallucinations”. Rather than viewing these errors as random bugs\, the project frames them as “epistemic erasure\,” where algorithms invent authorities or omit key figures in ways that mirror historical discrimination. The dataset includes the original prompts\, the incorrect AI responses\, and human-verified annotations that identify exactly where the models failed against standard archival sources. \nAlex Conner – ººSPARK**CIVIC\nºSPARK**AI × ºDO..OS form the intelligence and operating layer behind ºSPARK**CIVIC’s NYC Data Week session\, demonstrating how NYC Open Data can move from published datasets to shared understanding and clear next steps. ºSPARK**AI helps interpret complex civic data and policy context into consistent\, plain-language meaning\, while ºDO..OS ensures that guidance carries forward as reusable actions\, templates\, and handoffs across committees\, agencies\, partners\, and the public.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/nyc-pit-pop-up-cuny-open-data-takeover-day-three/
LOCATION:Oculus World Trade Center\, 185 Greenwich Street\, New York\, New York\, 10006\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T015918Z
UID:10001860-1774436400-1774440000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Reclaiming the Night: Urban Light Pollution\, Solutions\, and Open Data
DESCRIPTION:New York\, the city that never sleeps\, is too bright. Light pollution disrupts wildlife\, affects human well-being\, wastes money and energy\, contributes to climate change\, and blocks our view of the universe. But there are ways to fix it. In this workshop\, you will learn the basics of light pollution\, the solutions\, New York’s efforts to control it\, and available open datasets for measuring and mapping nighttime lights in the city and worldwide. This workshop is open to everyone who cares about the night. \nAbout the presenter:\nRuoyu Li: graduate student in urban data science at the NYU Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP); data analysis and social impact intern at DarkSky International; leader of DarkSky’s New York state chapter; treasurer of the NYU student chapter of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ASPRS); and an advocate for the dark sky movement for over a decade. \nCo-organizers: \n\nDarkSky New York;\nNYU Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP);\nAmerican Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ASPRS) NYU Student Chapter
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/reclaiming-the-night/
LOCATION:NYU CUSP – 370 Jay Street\, 370 Jay Street\, Room 1201\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11201
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/E70_Reclaiming-the-Night_Urban-Light-Pollution-Solutions-and-Open-Data-scaled.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260305T144244Z
UID:10001857-1774436400-1774440000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:PriceWise - A grocery prices database built by and for budget-conscious communities
DESCRIPTION:Food prices are too *&#$ high! \nEveryone is talking about grocery price inflation\, but how do we really figure out individual item price changes? Let alone keep track of prices across different stores and neighborhoods? In combination with recessionary trends and other food justice issues\, it’s stressful for budget-conscious people to make well-informed buying decisions. \nThis talk will demo an exciting new community tool PriceWise. This web application creates a database of food prices to help families and individuals easily digitize their grocery receipts and work together to pool that data across their community. The tool uses NYC OpenData to connect these prices with stores and neighborhoods. \nDesigner and developer Shiva Muthiah will talk about how and why they built this tool\, and discuss why making food pricing more legible can help policy-makers address food justice challenges.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/pricewise-a-grocery-prices-database-built-by-and-for-budget-conscious-communities/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/pricewise-a-grocery-prices-database-built-by-and-for-budget-conscious-communities/
CATEGORIES:Demonstration
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/E106_PriceWise-A-grocery-prices-database-built-by-and-for-budget-conscious-communities.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260313T211846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260313T211846Z
UID:10001951-1774436400-1774440000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Build It\, Use It\, Own It: Making Language Data Work For You
DESCRIPTION:Move from language access awareness to action in this session hosted by the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs\, featuring the Department of City Planning (DCP) and CLEAR Global. \nSee demonstrations of DCP’s language data tools—both existing resources and new tools in development—and learn how to put language data to use. Discover CLEAR Global’s innovative approaches to building language datasets for humanitarian contexts and crisis response. \nBuilding on the 2025 Open Data Week session “Decoding NYC’s Linguistic Diversity\,” this session equips you with practical frameworks for collecting\, analyzing\, and applying language data strategically. Perfect for anyone ready to make evidence-based decisions about language access.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/build-it-use-it-own-it-making-language-data-work-for-you/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/build-it-use-it-own-it-making-language-data-work-for-you/
CATEGORIES:Panel Discussion
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T130000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260303T150012Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T153219Z
UID:10001888-1774440000-1774443600@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:The Newest New Yorkers: How Immigrant Groups Navigate Visa Pathways
DESCRIPTION:New York is a city of immigrants\, but its makeup is shaped by U.S. immigration laws. Join Donnise Hurley\, a senior geographic analyst at the New York City Department of City Planning\, for a preview of the upcoming publication of The Newest New Yorkers\, 2026 where she analyzes federal data from the Office of Homeland Security Statistics (OHSS) to reveal the hidden impact of immigration policy on New York City’s demographic landscape. You will receive a snapshot of the lawful permanent resident (i.e.\, “green card”) categories most used by foreign-born groups during the 2010s and see how these admission patterns have shifted over time. You will also gain clarity on the difference between OHSS administrative data on lawful permanent residents and the more familiar U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) data on the characteristics of the foreign-born population overall. Whether you are a New Yorker curious about your community or a researcher\, librarian\, or policymaker\, this talk offers insight into how the law sets the parameters for immigration flows to the city.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/the-newest-new-yorkers-how-immigrant-groups-navigate-visa-pathways/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/the-newest-new-yorkers-how-immigrant-groups-navigate-visa-pathways/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260306T130013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T131231Z
UID:10001907-1774440000-1774465200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Echo{logies}\, Data Through Design Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Echo{logies} is the 2026 exhibition of Data Through Design\, an independent collective who organize an annual art exhibition featuring works that creatively analyze\, interpret\, and interrogate data made available on NYC Open Data. \nVisiting the Exhibition\nThe exhibition is open to the public daily from 12pm to 7 pm during Open Data Week. On March 21\, we will host an opening event that requires RSVP. \nWhen: March 21 – April 5\, 2026\, 12:00pm – 7:00pm \nWhere: BRIC\, 647 Fulton Street (at Rockwell Place)\, Brooklyn\, NY 11217 \nOpening Event: Saturday\, March 21\, 6:30 – 8:30 PM; RSVP. \nAbout Echo{logies}\nThe projects in Echo{logies} work with the bodies of knowledge\, or “-logies”\, that reverberate through New York City’s data. They explore ecosystems and cycles of life expressed in data; the rhythms of growth\, decay\, renewal\, and transformation as they “echo” through data\, and the interplay between human and non-human worlds. \nThis year’s theme engages with questions such as: How can the city\, and data itself\, be understood as ecological and cyclical? How might data be materialized\, embodied\, or inscribed by natural processes? What accumulates\, erodes\, regenerates\, lingers as traces\, or resonates as echoes? \nThe work in this exhibition makes data felt\, witnessed\, or transformed—through physicalization\, interaction\, or by exposing how nature itself records and inscribes change. The artworks engage with living systems\, natural or urban ecologies\, or information ecosystems\, and examine materiality and craft\, murmurations and flows\, entropy and genesis\, and the sublime scale of ecological change. \n\nDesire Paths: Becca Ellsworth & Becca Odell\nHartLine: Ian Callender & Karla Rothstein\nLandscape Workshop: Mark Heller & Mariel Collard Arias\nLinger Loiter: Charlotte Gartenberg & Ivan Himanen\nMetropolitan Cuneiform: Jingrong Zhang\nThe Oracle of Gotham: Karissa Whiting & Elizabeth Costa\nTurnstile Murmurations: Trpti Sanghvi\nUrban Data Orchestra: Composing the Hidden Rhythms of the City: Elina Oikonomaki & Lukas Lesina Debiasi\nWaste Rhythms: Living Records of NYC Communities: HaoChe Hung & Tianxing (Vincent) Zhu\nWild Lots: Craig Fahner & al haley\n\nEcho{logies} is organized and curated by the 2026 Data Through Design team: Julia Bloom\, Tereza Chanaki\, Rachel Daniell\, Jack Darcey\, Sara Eichner\, Justin Roberts\, and Can Sucuoğlu.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/echologies-data-through-design-exhibition/2026-03-25/
LOCATION:BRIC\, 647 Fulton Street\, Brooklyn\, New York\, 11217\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T140000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170743Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T213326Z
UID:10001850-1774443600-1774447200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:From Static to Dynamic: A Preview of NYC’s Interactive Food Policy Dashboard
DESCRIPTION:The Mayor’s Office of Food Policy (MOFP)\, in partnership with the CUNY Urban Food Policy Institute\, is developing a comprehensive\, interactive dashboard that will transform how New York City visualizes and shares data about its food system. Building on the city’s existing Food Metrics Report\, this user-friendly platform will make food system data more accessible and actionable for a wide range of stakeholders\, including advocates\, service providers\, researchers\, city agencies\, and policymakers. \nThis Open Data Week event offers a preview of the dashboard before it launches this summer. Attendees an opportunity to explore its features and  provide valuable feedback to help refine the platform before its public launch. Following the session\, registrants will receive a communication when the dashboard is published.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/from-static-to-dynamic-a-preview-of-nycs-interactive-food-policy-dashboard/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/from-static-to-dynamic-a-preview-of-nycs-interactive-food-policy-dashboard/
CATEGORIES:Demonstration
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T140000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260307T145008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T143422Z
UID:10001924-1774443600-1774447200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:What 13 Million 311 Complaints Reveal About New York City's Quality of Life
DESCRIPTION:In this session\, David Tussey — retired technology executive and former executive director in the NYC Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT\, now OTI) — presents a data-driven Quality of Life Index built entirely from NYC’s 311 Service Request open dataset. Drawing on more than 13 million complaint records spanning 2020 through 2025\, the analysis tracks 30 complaint categories across five quality-of-life domains — from shelter conditions and neighborhood cleanliness to street safety and social distress — and measures how each has changed relative to a pre-established baseline. The methodology\, developed with guidance from mentor Dr. Jun Yan of the University of Connecticut Department of Statistics\, applies seasonally adjusted indexing and Statistical Process Control techniques to surface meaningful trends in public service demand. \nParticipants will see a live walkthrough of the analytical pipeline built in R using NYC Open Data\, including data preparation\, index computation\, and publication-ready visualizations. The session is part demonstration\, part methodology discussion\, and part provocation — the findings raise real questions about urban quality of life that city agencies\, policymakers\, and engaged New Yorkers will want to wrestle with. \nThis session is ideal for city employees working in technology or data roles\, academics and students interested in applied urban analytics\, and anyone curious about what 311 data can reveal when you look beyond individual complaints. No prior technical background is required to follow the findings\, though data practitioners will find the methodology discussion valuable. Attendees are encouraged to come with questions.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/what-13-million-311-complaints-reveal-about-new-york-citys-quality-of-life/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/what-13-million-311-complaints-reveal-about-new-york-citys-quality-of-life/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T150000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170742Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T215150Z
UID:10001852-1774447200-1774450800@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:How NYC Open Data Guided a Review of Initiatives to Improve Bus Speeds in New York City
DESCRIPTION:Buses are the second-most important mode of transportation for New Yorkers and visitors alike\, serving over 1.4 million riders daily. Yet\, to no one’s surprise\, they can be frustratingly slow. Traffic congestion\, construction detours\, double-parked vehicles\, and limited dedicated infrastructure all contribute to sluggish bus speeds. In early 2025\, the New York City Independent Budget Office (IBO) released a report analyzing city and state initiatives aimed at improving bus speeds\, including one of the most ambitious efforts—the New York City Streets Plan. Enacted in 2019 through City Council legislation\, the plan legally requires the NYC Department of Transportation to expand the city’s bus lane network\, with a goal of building over 150 miles of protected bus lanes by 2026. \nIn this presentation\, IBO budget and policy analyst Jan Mendez will guide attendees through some of the report’s biggest findings\, including how New York City bus speeds compare to other major cities across the United States\, bus ridership trends\, a historical analysis of bus speeds across the five boroughs\, the impact of funding and staffing challenges on implementation of the New York City Streets Plan\, and more! We’ll also explore an interactive map with data on all New York City bus lanes\, available to the public and created by the Independent Budget Office. \nThe New York City Independent Budget Office provides impartial\, nonpartisan information and analysis of the NYC budget\, and conducts policy research and analysis\, particularly on aspects of City government with notable fiscal and direct human impacts on New Yorkers. If you’re interested in a complex and analytical discussion on bus speeds and bus service\, or in transportation issues in general\, we invite you to attend!
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/how-nyc-open-data-guided-a-review-of-initiatives-to-improve-bus-speeds-in-new-york-city/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/how-nyc-open-data-guided-a-review-of-initiatives-to-improve-bus-speeds-in-new-york-city/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T153000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260307T143750Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T220045Z
UID:10001933-1774447200-1774452600@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Mapping Green Space Access: Turn Data into Community Action
DESCRIPTION:A workshop that uses NYC Open Data to map green space access gaps\, not just where parks exist\, but who can actually reach them. We’ll identify transit barriers\, unsafe pedestrian routes\, and vacant lots with conversion potential\, then equip participants with concrete tools to turn that analysis into community advocacy. \nThe core question isn’t whether parks are near enough\, it’s whether people can access them. A park two miles away with no bus route might as well not exist for the people who need it most. Participants will learn to map those gaps and identify actionable solutions: Which bus route needs extending? Which vacant lot could become a neighborhood green space? Which crosswalk is missing? This workshop is about democratizing spatial analysis so that communities\, not just planners\, have the data to advocate for themselves. \nBy the end\, participants will have learned what it takes to create a working map of access gaps in a neighborhood of their choosing\, a set of targeted recommendations\, and guidance on how to present that data to the decision-makers who can act on it. \nThis event will be held at the Little Red School House\, 272 Avenue of the Americas.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/mapping-green-space-access-turn-data-into-community-action/
LOCATION:Little Red School House\, 272 6th Avenue\, New York\, New York\, 10014\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Demonstration
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T160000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260225T170741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260323T131111Z
UID:10001854-1774450800-1774454400@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Measuring Poverty Using Census Bureau Data
DESCRIPTION:Join Census Bureau data dissemination specialists Joli Golden and Monica Dukes to learn about the datasets that the Census uses to measure poverty\, how the Census defines poverty measures\, and the numerous data tools you can access to explore poverty by geographic area and demographic group. You will see how to access the most recent poverty briefs and reports and poverty data tables. We will also introduce SAIPE\, a tool for Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates. \nA Census Bureau poverty Subject Matter Expert will be on hand to answer your questions live in the chat and at the end of the presentation.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/measuring-poverty-using-census-bureau-data/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/measuring-poverty-using-census-bureau-data/
CATEGORIES:Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/E8_Measuring-Poverty-Using-Census-Bureau-Data.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T170000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260307T143137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T153557Z
UID:10001939-1774454400-1774458000@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Open Data about Mobility
DESCRIPTION:In this whirlwind session\, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) and NYC Department of Transportation (DOT) will take you through a tour of the datasets made available through their agencies’ respective open data programs\, and highlight opportunities for analysis that combine datasets from their separate open data portals. \nHighlighted datasets include\, but are not limited to\, pedestrian volumes\, bus speeds\, and vehicle counts (citywide\, from the DOT\, and entries to the congestion relief zone\, from the MTA). We’ll cover how the data is collected\, why the data matters\, and interesting things you can find in the datasets. \nCome ready to take notes on interesting datasets you may want to use later in a project. You’ll leave the session inspired and ready to take on a new analytics project using open data about mobility! After this event\, join DOT\, the MTA\, and Young Professionals in Transportation for a happy hour.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/open-data-about-mobility/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/open-data-about-mobility/
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/generic-event-updated.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260302T223309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T151928Z
UID:10001892-1774458000-1774465200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:What’s in a Dataset? Cyanotypes as Tools for Critical and Creative Data Capture
DESCRIPTION:How would you describe your favorite tree to someone who had never seen it? \nFramed around themes of data feminism and critical data studies\, this workshop\, led by Alissa Kushner and Star Ajasin\, explores the choices behind how traditional datasets and metadata describe the world around us. Participants will poke through NYC Open Data’s most recent Street Tree Census\, interrogating what it means to capture the essence of our urban environments into a dataset\, questioning the choices\, politics\, and perspectives behind how data is chosen\, organized\, and labeled. We will then visit a tree closest to the site of the workshop and collect metadata not typically captured about it through the creation of cyanotype images (also known as sun prints)\, serving as a counter-method of slow and embodied data capture. Participants will leave the workshop with a more critical understanding of environmental data as well as a handmade cyanotype to take home with them. \nThis event is hosted at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering at 370 Jay Street in Downtown Brooklyn.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/whats-in-a-dataset-cyanotypes-as-tools-for-critical-and-creative-data-capture/
LOCATION:370 Jay Street\, 370 Jay Street\, Room 324\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11201
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://opendataweek.nyc/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/E93_Whats-in-a-Dataset_Cyanotypes-as-Tools-for-Critical-and-Creative-Data-Capture.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260302T223812Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260312T130152Z
UID:10001893-1774459800-1774465200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:YPT x MTA x DOT Open Data Happy Hour
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a happy hour celebrating all of the great open data we have available about mobility in New York City! This happy hour is hosted by Young Professionals in Transportation\, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority\, and the NYC Department of Transportation. You do not need to be a member of any of these organizations to join\, all are welcome! \nThis happy hour is taking place at Amity Hall Downtown\, 80 W 3rd St\, Manhattan. \nBefore the happy hour\, join the MTA and DOT for a virtual event about mobility data.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/ypt-x-mta-x-dot-open-data-happy-hour/
LOCATION:Amity Hall Downtown\, 80 W 3rd St\, New York\, New York\, 10012\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Networking
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GEO:40.7297143411;-73.9988632743
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260424T144632
CREATED:20260307T142655Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T153756Z
UID:10001942-1774461600-1774465200@opendataweek.nyc
SUMMARY:Teaching Google Sheets Functionality to High School Students through Open Data
DESCRIPTION:This is a virtual hands-on workshop where we will dive in on spreadsheet fundamentals using Google Sheets through the lens of teaching virtual high school students. Participants who are new to spreadsheets and to those with intermediate skills are encouraged to attend\, and those that teach high school students looking for a data lens. Participants will access a shared spreadsheet where we will learn about spreadsheets fundamentals together\, and model how these skills can be taught to high school students. We will analyze a data set from NYC Open Data to apply the new functions we learn. \nEthel Khanis teaches high school chemistry and Socratic seminar at New York City’s first virtual high school.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/teaching-google-sheets-functionality-to-high-school-students-through-open-data/
LOCATION:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/teaching-google-sheets-functionality-to-high-school-students-through-open-data/
CATEGORIES:Workshop,Workshop or Training
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR