What we analyze

Spatial decisions require consideration of different factors. Radexis selects and combines data for a specific task rather than using a fixed set.

We do not limit ourselves to a single source or type of data. The set of factors is always determined by the city context, the business, and the goal of analysis.

Basic spatial layers

Territory and boundaries

districts, influence zones, radii

Residential development

housing types, density, distribution

Commercial objects

stores, services, points of attraction

Competitors and adjacent businesses

direct and indirect overlaps

Demand and movement

We consider not only the presence of objects, but how people move and use space.

Pedestrian and transport flows
Points of people concentration
Connection of locations with infrastructure
Accessibility and barriers

Distribution and saturation

It is important not just the number of objects, but their spatial distribution and density.

Competition density
Overlap of radii
Free and overheated zones
Potential growth zones

Context matters more than a list

We do not use a universal checklist. For each task the dataset and layers are formed individually. Sometimes the key factor is competition, sometimes movement, sometimes residential structure.

Different data combinations apply to different tasks. Below are typical scenarios where spatial analysis is especially useful.

See use-case scenarios