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Osceola Greenprint

The Osceola Greenprint provides maps, data, and supporting context to better inform land use decisions, advance and sustainable development, and build healthy and resilient communities. The tool is available in both English and Spanish.

Lake Russell at sunset with a large tree near the shoreline covered in Spanish moss.

Lake Russell: The Disney Wilderness Preserve nature trails lead to a peaceful overlook of this natural lake. © Bob Blanchard

The goal of the Osceola Greenprint is to help planners, agencies, academics, practitioners, community organizers, and others include the benefits of in conservation and smart growth planning while helping avoid or mitigate adverse impacts from decisions on people and nature.  

“Advancing smart growth and sustainable development is essential to addressing the interconnectedness between conservation and development. The Osceola Greenprint can help inform where and how communities grow.”

Christianah Oyenuga, Ph.D.

The Nature Conservancy

The Osceola Greenprint is a free, publicly available resource accessible in both English and Spanish that can enable diverse groups of users to identify, assess, understand, and communicate the multiple benefits of natural infrastructure and where to incorporate

Two women paddling in a canoe on a lake through aquatic grasses.

Disney Wilderness Preserve © Val Hahn

How the Greenprint works 

With the Osceola Greenprint, users can explore natural resource data in a web-based platform or download data into their own GIS (geographic information systems) environment. Users can select from a small set of predefined boundaries, ranging from the whole county to cities and communities, or they can use more advanced tools to draw an area, upload shapes in common GIS formats, or select parcels by clicking the map or entering parcel ID numbers.  

Once a shape is selected, a report specific to that area highlights the importance of nature and its benefits under several themes: 

Overview
Built Environment
Wildlife Corridor
Biodiversity & Habitat
Freshwater
Resilience
Parks & Recreation

Each theme includes multiple indicators and provides base information such as natural and agricultural resource hotspots. This helps users evaluate synergies and tradeoffs between the value and benefits of natural infrastructure in Osceola County and other options. The tool demonstrates the significance of these resources at a local scale so users can identify and clearly communicate the impacts of environmental pressures on natural and agricultural resources and water-resource lands.