What is TimeTiles?
TimeTiles is an interactive chronicle platform that transforms geo-temporal data into compelling, explorable stories. Whether you're investigating police shootings, documenting environmental disasters, or analyzing protest patterns, TimeTiles helps you create accessible visualizations that reveal patterns across time and space.
The Problem TimeTiles Solves
Traditional tools fall short when it comes to geospatial storytelling:
- Excel/Sheets: Can't handle maps or large datasets effectively
- BI Dashboards (Metabase, Superset): Too complex for non-experts, dashboard-focused rather than narrative
- GIS Tools (QGIS, ArcGIS): Require technical expertise, not designed for public consumption
- Custom Solutions: Time-intensive to build, hard to maintain
TimeTiles bridges this gap by providing a ready-made platform specifically designed for creating interactive chronicles of geospatial events.
Core Concepts
Interactive Chronicles
Unlike static reports or complex dashboards, TimeTiles creates interactive chronicles - explorable datasets with narrative elements that allow readers to discover patterns and stories within your data.
Event-Centric Design
Every data point in TimeTiles represents an event that happened at a specific:
- Location (latitude/longitude)
- Time (date/timestamp)
- Context (rich metadata like victim info, categories, descriptions)
Non-Expert Friendly
TimeTiles is designed for storytelling, not analysis. Your audience doesn't need to understand SQL queries or statistical concepts - they can simply pan, zoom, and filter to explore your data intuitively.
How It Works
1. Import Your Data
CSV/Excel → TimeTiles → Interactive Chronicle
Bring your data from:
- CSV/Excel files with location and timestamp columns
- JSON datasets from investigations or APIs
- API endpoints for live data feeds
- Manual entry for smaller datasets
2. Automatic Processing
TimeTiles automatically:
- Detects schema and suggests optimal field mappings
- Geocodes addresses when only text locations are available
- Clusters nearby events for performance with large datasets
- Generates visualizations appropriate for your data
3. Share Your Chronicle
Deploy as:
- Public website for maximum reach
- Private instance for internal research
- Embeddable widgets (future feature) for integration into articles
Real-World Examples
Journalist: Police Shooting Database
"I have a database of fatal police shootings and want to display it to the general public (non-experts in exploring data)."
Challenge: Making 5 years of police shooting data accessible to readers who aren't data analysts.
TimeTiles Solution: Import CSV data with victim demographics, location coordinates, and incident details. Readers can explore patterns by filtering by victim age, race, or weapon status while seeing geographic and temporal clusters.
Researcher: Investigation Dataset
"I have a dump of 100k points coming out of a journalistic investigation and want to explore the data."
Challenge: Analyzing massive datasets to find newsworthy patterns and stories.
TimeTiles Solution: Import the full dataset and use server-side clustering to maintain performance. Filter by metadata fields to identify trends, then create focused chronicles highlighting specific findings.
Activist: Environmental Justice
"Document pollution incidents in marginalized communities over the past decade."
Challenge: Connecting environmental data to demographic patterns in a way that's compelling for policy advocacy.
TimeTiles Solution: Combine pollution incident data with community demographic information, allowing advocates to show clear patterns of environmental racism through interactive exploration.
Technical Flexibility
TimeTiles serves both end users and developers:
Ready-to-Use Application
- Deploy TimeTiles as a complete web application
- Import data through the admin interface
- Configure public/private access controls
- Self-host or use managed hosting (coming soon)
Customizable Library
- Use TimeTiles components in your own applications
- Integrate with existing data pipelines
- Customize visualizations and branding
- Build domain-specific chronicle applications
Comparison to Similar Tools
Tool | Focus | Audience | Strengths | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|
TimeTiles | Interactive chronicles | Non-technical storytellers | Narrative-focused, ready-to-use, geospatial | Newer ecosystem |
Timemap | Incident monitoring | Activists/researchers | Proven in conflict documentation | No longer maintained |
Datawrapper | Data visualization | Journalists | Easy embedding, great design | Limited geospatial features |
Metabase | Business dashboards | Data analysts | Powerful querying | Too complex for public audiences |
uMap | Collaborative mapping | General users | Simple map creation | Limited temporal features |
Getting Started
Ready to create your first interactive chronicle? Check out our Quick Start Guide to get TimeTiles running in minutes.
Have questions about whether TimeTiles is right for your use case? See our FAQ or reach out to the community.