Resilient Landscapes at the Wildland Urban Interface
November 11, 2025
Great Ecology’s Poster Featured at World Design Congress 2025
November 20, 2025
Resilient Landscapes at the Wildland Urban Interface
November 11, 2025
Great Ecology’s Poster Featured at World Design Congress 2025
November 20, 2025

Modeling Resilience: Integrating GIS & Modeling

to Build Fire-Adapted Landscapes

 

Drake Stasyshyn

November 19, 2025

Great Ecology provides a suite of fire resilient landscape services, ranging from community wildfire protection plans, brush management plans to long-term wildfire planning. Our specialists, including ecologists, scientists, planners and landscape architects, collaborate on projects to ensure long term community and site viability.

This blog celebrates GIS Day and is part of our Fire Resilient Landscapes blog series. Stay tuned for additional content exploring fire and similar climate change driven impacts.


Wildfire is a natural force shaping the landscapes of the western United States. But the neighborhoods, roads, and power lines now woven into these fire-adapted ecosystems were never built with fire in mind. After decades of aggressive fire suppression and worsening drought, the result is a dangerous fuel load that creates ideal conditions for larger, hotter, and more destructive wildfires. While swift and strategic wildfire response is paramount, there is a clear necessity to prepare communities and infrastructure to prevent the damage caused by wildfires before they start.

Proactive communities across the western US are preparing for wildfires by creating publicly-funded management and protection plans like Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPPs). Environmental consultants tasked with creating CWPPs explore new approaches to landscape management and wildfire preparedness, especially by utilizing spatial modelling tools.

Geographic Information Systems (GIS) is a critical tool in environmental planning, offering complex mapping and modelling capabilities as the basis for well-informed wildfire planning and prevention. GIS enables professionals to quantify and visualize key variables that influence wildfire risk, such as topography, vegetation cover, and plant community composition. By analyzing how these variables interact across a landscape, GIS helps identify areas where wildfire risk is elevated—particularly where multiple risk factors overlap. Additionally, GIS models can incorporate variables of concern to stakeholders, such as proximity to the wildland–urban interface (WUI) , critical infrastructure, or evacuation routes, allowing detailed analysis of potential vulnerabilities.

In Santa Cruz County, Arizona, Great Ecology is collaborating with local stakeholders to develop a Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) tailored to the region’s unique topography and ecological conditions. By combining ecological expertise with high-resolution geospatial data, the team created and applied a wildfire risk model that integrates key variables contributing to wildfire behavior. This model enables ecologists and the community to identify high-risk areas and ultimately craft a well-informed CWPP.

GIS analysts at Great Ecology utilized a combination of ArcGIS Pro Software and FlamMap, a wildfire modeling tool developed by the U.S. Forest Service, to understand and visualize six key variables related to both landscape conditions and stakeholder concerns in Santa Cruz County. These variables included slope, aspect, vegetation cover, vegetation composition, rate of fire spread, and proximity to the wildland urban interface (WUI). The layers were integrated into ArcGIS Pro using a weighted overlay analysis. This resulted in a comprehensive wildfire risk map that layered these critical factors to highlight areas of heightened vulnerability across the county. Ecologists and planners from Great Ecology took the risk model to the field in Santa Cruz County, strategizing with local authorities on priority areas for management and appropriate modes of intervention. The community-tailored spatial model fostered the development of a detailed and focused management plan by isolating areas of immediate concern across the county.

This is just one example of how GIS informs wildfire protection and resilience. With these tools, professionals and communities achieve a comprehensive understanding of the landscapes they work with and design effective management protocols. Tools like GIS help us stay ahead of future wildfires by strategically hardening communities for destructive events and planning infrastructure that is adapted to local ecosystems.

Great Ecology provides habitat restoration, landscape design, and other ecological services to leading corporations, governments, and nonprofits throughout the United States and around the world.

Let's discuss how we can support your ecological goals!