1st Edition
Prompt Cartography Interactive Web Map Design with LLMs
Part I: Prompt Cartography Fundamentals. 1. From Web Cartographer to Prompt Cartography Director. 2. Learning to Speak via Prompt. 3. The Cartography Process as Knowledge Recall. 4. The Prompt Cartography Workflow and Pipelines. 5. Provenance, Ethics, and Privacy. Part II: From Reorientation to Application. 6. The (Constant) Critique Pipeline. 7. The Data Engineering Pipeline. 8. Learning the Language of Map Form and Style. 9. Map Elements, Layouts, and the Curse of LLM Defaults. 10. Color Theory and Palette Design. 11. Prompting for Typography. 12. Map Symbology. 13. Thematic Representation. 14. Change Over Time. 15. Bringing Your Visual Plan to Life via Interactivity. 16. From Prompt Cartographer to Interactive Web Map Director. 17. Sustaining a Map That Has Left the Station: The Maintenance Pipeline. Part III: The Prompt Cartography Seminar. 18. Mapping Community Data with Accountability. 19. Mapping Presence, Absence, and Uncertainty. 20. The Main Feature Presentation: Visualizing Complex Connections.
Biography
Ian Muehlenhaus, Ph.D., is a cartographer, author, and educator with more than 15 years of experience in higher-education teaching, research, and academic program leadership in mapping and GIS. He wrote the widely used textbook Web Cartography and has spent his career helping students and professionals design interactive maps that are both visually compelling and intellectually honest. Ian currently works as a Principal Product Engineer at Esri, where he develops and tests visualization tools, prototypes new LLM-based mapping workflows, and explores how AI tools and large language models can be woven responsibly into the mapmaking user experience. His research and professional writing span persuasive and rhetorical cartography, flow and panscalar maps, and cartographic ethics, with a particular focus on how design choices shape public belief in the messages maps are communicating. Ian also serves as Chair of the International Cartographic Association’s Commission on Map Design, where he collaborates with colleagues worldwide to advance contemporary map design practice for both print and digital media.






