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<br />limits and DGB), ity of Eugene (city limits and DGB), and the Metro <br />Plan Area (outsi e DGBs), to recommend how the use of existing <br />commercial and i ustriallands might be maximized. <br /> <br />This project did not t e on the larger technology and process issues described <br />in the previous section. e. practical database can be built in months rather than <br />years, bringing the dispe bits of information that are currently available into a <br />standardized format that n immediately be a useful policy tool. Thus, the <br />database built for this pr ~ ct is based on static table exports from several local <br />jurisdictions' databases, ditional table exports from external databases, and <br />tables produced from GI analysis. <br /> <br />In summary, the pra t al database is a "Single Database Snapshot." It <br />contains data that can be pdated, but it does not incorporate the technologies or <br />protocols that allow it to automatically updated as the data sources from which <br />it draws get updated. Th , it is a database that can answer many questions about <br />the supply of land by m attributes as of some date (e.g., late 2005). Figure 2-2 <br />shows how the ECONo est team compiled data from multiple sources, <br />performed GIS analysis en required, and prepare printed reports and maps. <br /> <br />Commercial and Industrial Lands Database <br /> <br />ECONorthwest <br /> <br />September 2006 <br /> <br />Page 8 <br />