Author

Silvia Canelón

Published

May 31, 2022

Interactive Map

Philly’s Center City District posted a list of restaurants and bars participating in Philly’s 2022 CCD Sips. CCD Sips is a series of summer Wednesday evenings (4:30-7pm) filled with happy hour specials, between June 1st and August 31st.

I prefer to take in this information as a map instead of a list, so I scraped some information from the website and made one! You can click or tap on the circle map markers to see information about each restaurant/bar along with a direct link to their posted happy hour specials.

Check out the link at the top of this post for a larger version of the interactive map below. And jump down to the tutorial if you’d like to learn how I used R to build the interactive map!

Tutorial start

Aside from the tidyverse and here packages, I used a handful of R packages to bring this map project together.

Package Purpose Version
robotstxt Check website for scraping permissions 0.7.13
rvest Scrape the information off of the website 1.0.1
ggmap Geocode the restaurant addresses 3.0.0
leaflet Build the interactive map 2.0.4.1
leaflet.extras Add extra functionality to map 1.0.0

Scraping the data

Checking site permissions

Check the site’s terms of service using the robotstxt package, which downloads and parses the site’s robots.txt file.

What I wanted to look for was whether any pages are not allowed to be crawled by bots/scrapers. In my case there weren’t any, indicated by Allow: /.

get_robotstxt("https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view")
Output
[robots.txt]
--------------------------------------

# robots.txt overwrite by: on_suspect_content

User-agent: *
Allow: /



[events]
--------------------------------------

requested:   https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view/robots.txt 
downloaded:  https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view/robots.txt 

$on_not_found
$on_not_found$status_code
[1] 404


$on_file_type_mismatch
$on_file_type_mismatch$content_type
[1] "text/html; charset=utf-8"


$on_suspect_content
$on_suspect_content$parsable
[1] FALSE

$on_suspect_content$content_suspect
[1] TRUE


[attributes]
--------------------------------------

problems, cached, request, class

Harvesting data from the first page

Then I used the rvest package to scrape the information from the tables of restaurants/bars participating in CCD Sips.

I’ve learned that ideally you would only scrape each page once, so I checked my approach with the first page before I wrote a function to scrape the remaining pages.

# define the page
url <- "https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1"

# read the page html
html1 <- read_html(url)

# extract table info
table1 <- 
  html1 |> 
  html_node("table") |> 
  html_table()
table1 |> head(3) |> kableExtra::kable()
Name Address Phone CCD SIPS Specials
1225 Raw Sushi and Sake Lounge 1225 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.238.1903 CCD SIPS Specials
1518 Bar and Grill 1518 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 267.639.6851 CCD SIPS Specials
Air Grille Garden at Dilworth Park 1 S 15th St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.587.2761 CCD SIPS Specials
# extract hyperlinks to specific restaurant/bar specials
links <- 
  html1 |> 
  html_elements(".o-table__tag.ccd-text-link") |> 
  html_attr("href") |> 
  as_tibble()
links |> head(3) |> kableExtra::kable()
value
#1225-raw-sushi-and-sake-lounge
#1518-bar-and-grill
#air-grill-garden-dilworth-park
# add full hyperlinks to the table info
table1Mod <-
  bind_cols(table1, links) |> 
  mutate(Specials = paste0(url, value)) |> 
  select(-c(`CCD SIPS Specials`, value))
table1Mod |> head(3) |> kableExtra::kable()
Name Address Phone Specials
1225 Raw Sushi and Sake Lounge 1225 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.238.1903 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1225-raw-sushi-and-sake-lounge
1518 Bar and Grill 1518 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 267.639.6851 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1518-bar-and-grill
Air Grille Garden at Dilworth Park 1 S 15th St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.587.2761 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#air-grill-garden-dilworth-park

Harvesting data from the remaining pages

Once I could confirm that the above approach harvested the information I needed, I adapted the code into a function that I could apply to pages 2-3 of the site.

getTables <- function(pageNumber) {
  Sys.sleep(2)
  
  url <- paste0("https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=", pageNumber)
  
  html <- read_html(url)
  
  table <- 
    html |> 
    html_node("table") |>
    html_table()
  
  links <- 
    html |> 
    html_elements(".o-table__tag.ccd-text-link") |> 
    html_attr("href") |> 
    as_tibble()
  
  tableSpecials <<-
    bind_cols(table, links) |> 
    mutate(Specials = paste0(url, value)) |> 
    select(-c(`CCD SIPS Specials`, value))
}

I used my getTable() function and the purrr::map_df() function to harvest the table of restaurants/bars from pages 2 and 3. Then I combined all the data frames together and saved the complete data frame as an .Rds object so that I wouldn’t have to scrape the data again.

# get remaining tables
table2 <- map_df(2:3, getTables) 

# combine all tables
table <- bind_rows(table1Mod, table2)
table |> head(3) |> kableExtra::kable()
Name Address Phone Specials
1028 Yamitsuki Sushi & Ramen 1028 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107 215.629.3888 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1028-yamitsuki-sushi-ramen
1225 Raw Sushi and Sake Lounge 1225 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.238.1903 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1225-raw-sushi-and-sake-lounge
1518 Bar and Grill 1518 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 267.639.6851 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1518-bar-and-grill
# save full table to file
write_rds(
  table,
  file = here("content/blog/2022-05-31-ccd-sips/specialsScraped.Rds")
  )

Geocoding addresses

The next step was to use geocoding to convert the restaurant/bar addresses to geographical coordinates (longitude and latitude) that I could map. I used the ggmap package and the Google Geocoding API service because this was a small project (59 addresses/requests) which wouldn’t make a dent in the free credit available on the platform.

The last time I geocoded addresses was for an almost identical project in 2019 and I had issues using the same API key from back then, so I made a new one. I restricted my new key to the Geocoding and Geolocation APIs.

# register my API key
# ggmap::register_google(key = "[your key]")

# geocode addresses
specials_ggmap <- 
  table |> 
  mutate_geocode(Address)

# rename new variables
specials <- 
  specials_ggmap |> 
  rename(Longitude = lon,
         Latitude = lat) 
specials |> head(3) |> kableExtra::kable()
Name Address Phone Specials Longitude Latitude
1028 Yamitsuki Sushi & Ramen 1028 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107 215.629.3888 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1028-yamitsuki-sushi-ramen -75.15746 39.95354
1225 Raw Sushi and Sake Lounge 1225 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 215.238.1903 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1225-raw-sushi-and-sake-lounge -75.16149 39.95004
1518 Bar and Grill 1518 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19102 267.639.6851 https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccd-sips/sips-list-view?page=1#1518-bar-and-grill -75.16665 39.95020

I made sure to save the new data frame with geographical coordinates as an .Rds object so I wouldn’t have to geocode the data again! This would be particularly important if I was working on a large project.

# save table with geocoded addresses to file
write_rds(
  specials,
  file = here("content/blog/2022-05-31-ccd-sips/specialsGeocoded.Rds"))

Building the map

To build the map, I used the leaflet package. Some of the resources I found helpful, in addition to the package documentation:

Customizing map markers

# style pop-ups for the map with inline css styling

# marker for the restaurants/bars
popInfoCircles <- paste("<h2 style='font-family: Red Hat Text, sans-serif; font-size: 1.6em; color:#43464C;'>", "<a style='color: #00857A;' href=", specials$Specials, ">", specials$Name, "</a></h2>","<p style='font-family: Red Hat Text, sans-serif; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.5em; color:#9197A6;'>", specials$Address, "</p>")

# marker for the center of the map
popInfoMarker<-paste("<h1 style='padding-top: 0.5em; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; font-family: Red Hat Text, sans-serif; font-size: 1.8em; color:#43464C;'>", "<a style='color: #00857A;' href='https://centercityphila.org/explore-center-city/ccdsips'>", "Center City District Sips 2022", "</a></h1><p style='color:#9197A6; font-family: Red Hat Text, sans-serif; font-size: 1.5em; padding-bottom: 1em;'>", "Philadelphia, PA", "</p>")

# custom icon for the center of the map
awesome <-
  makeAwesomeIcon(
    icon = "map-pin",
    iconColor = "#FFFFFF",
    markerColor = "darkblue",
    library = "fa"
  )

Plotting the restaurants/bars

leaflet(data = specials, 
        width = "100%", 
        height = "850px",
        # https://stackoverflow.com/a/42170340
        options = tileOptions(minZoom = 15,
                              maxZoom = 19)) |>
  # add map markers ----
  addCircles(
    lat = ~ specials$Latitude, 
    lng = ~ specials$Longitude, 
    fillColor = "#009E91", #olivedrab goldenrod
    fillOpacity = 0.6, 
    stroke = F,
    radius = 12, 
    popup = popInfoCircles,
    label = ~ Name,
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      ))

Adding the map background

leaflet(data = specials, 
        width = "100%", 
        height = "850px",
        # https://stackoverflow.com/a/42170340
        options = tileOptions(minZoom = 15,
                              maxZoom = 19)) |>
  # add map markers ----
  addCircles(
    lat = ~ specials$Latitude, 
    lng = ~ specials$Longitude, 
    fillColor = "#009E91", #olivedrab goldenrod
    fillOpacity = 0.6, 
    stroke = F,
    radius = 12, 
    popup = popInfoCircles,
    label = ~ Name,
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      )) |>
  # add map tiles in the background ----
  addProviderTiles(providers$CartoDB.Positron)

Setting the map view

leaflet(data = specials, 
        width = "100%", 
        height = "850px",
        # https://stackoverflow.com/a/42170340
        options = tileOptions(minZoom = 15,
                              maxZoom = 19)) |>
  # add map markers ----
  addCircles(
    lat = ~ specials$Latitude, 
    lng = ~ specials$Longitude, 
    fillColor = "#009E91", #olivedrab goldenrod
    fillOpacity = 0.6, 
    stroke = F,
    radius = 12, 
    popup = popInfoCircles,
    label = ~ Name,
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      )) |>
  # add map tiles in the background ----
  addProviderTiles(providers$CartoDB.Positron) |>
  # set the map view
  setView(mean(specials$Longitude), 
          mean(specials$Latitude), 
          zoom = 16)

Adding a marker at the center

leaflet(data = specials, 
        width = "100%", 
        height = "850px",
        # https://stackoverflow.com/a/42170340
        options = tileOptions(minZoom = 15,
                              maxZoom = 19)) |>
  # add map markers ----
  addCircles(
    lat = ~ specials$Latitude, 
    lng = ~ specials$Longitude, 
    fillColor = "#009E91", #olivedrab goldenrod
    fillOpacity = 0.6,
    stroke = F,
    radius = 12, 
    popup = popInfoCircles,
    label = ~ Name,
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      )) |>
  # add map tiles in the background ----
  addProviderTiles(providers$CartoDB.Positron) |>
  # set the map view
  setView(mean(specials$Longitude), 
          mean(specials$Latitude), 
          zoom = 16) |>
  # add marker at the center ----
  addAwesomeMarkers(
    icon = awesome,
    lng = mean(specials$Longitude), 
    lat = mean(specials$Latitude), 
    label = "Center City District Sips 2022",
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      ),
    popup = popInfoMarker,
    popupOptions = popupOptions(maxWidth = 250))

Adding fullscreen control

leaflet(data = specials, 
        width = "100%", 
        height = "850px",
        # https://stackoverflow.com/a/42170340
        options = tileOptions(minZoom = 15,
                              maxZoom = 19)) |>
  # add map markers ----
  addCircles(
    lat = ~ specials$Latitude, 
    lng = ~ specials$Longitude, 
    fillColor = "#009E91", #olivedrab goldenrod
    fillOpacity = 0.6, 
    stroke = F,
    radius = 12, 
    popup = popInfoCircles,
    label = ~ Name,
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      )) |>
  # add map tiles in the background ----
  addProviderTiles(providers$CartoDB.Positron) |>
  # set the map view
  setView(mean(specials$Longitude), 
          mean(specials$Latitude), 
          zoom = 16) |>
  # add marker at the center ----
  addAwesomeMarkers(
    icon = awesome,
    lng = mean(specials$Longitude), 
    lat = mean(specials$Latitude), 
    label = "Center City District Sips 2022",
    labelOptions = labelOptions(
      style = list(
        "font-family" = "Red Hat Text, sans-serif",
        "font-size" = "1.2em")
      ),
    popup = popInfoMarker,
    popupOptions = popupOptions(maxWidth = 250)) |> 
  # add fullscreen control button ----
  leaflet.extras::addFullscreenControl()

Creating the map with Quarto

The first time around, I created a standalone map by first running an R script with the necessary code, and then exporting the HTML output as a webpage. This worked well enough, except that I realized:

  1. The title of the map webpage (the name that is displayed on a browser tab) was just “map” because the name of the HTML file was map.html. I wanted something more descriptive.
  2. The map wasn’t mobile-responsive. In other words, the map markers and text looked too small when viewed on a mobile device.

Changing the webpage title

The webpage title was a quick one to fix thanks to a Stack Overflow response to a question about turning off the title in an R Markdown document. The pagetitle YAML option lets you set the HTML’s title tag independently of the document title:

pagetitle: "Philly CCD Sips 2022 Map"

Fixing the mobile-responsiveness

The mobile-responsiveness issue could be solved by adding metadata to the map HTML, but I would need to be able to blend HTML with R code. I have been practicing using Quarto and figured I could make a standalone map from a Quarto document (.qmd) rather than an R Markdown one (.Rmd or .Rmarkdown). You can find the map’s Quarto document alongside this blog post.

According to the Leaflet library documentation and this Stack Overflow answer, fixing the map to be mobile-responsive required adding the following metadata to the HTML code:

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, maximum-scale=1.0, user-scalable=no" />

I used the metathis R package to add this metadata to an R code chunk in my Quarto document using the meta_viewport() function:

# make mobile-responsive
meta_viewport(
  width = "device-width",
  initial_scale = "1.0",
  maximum_scale = "1.0",
  user_scalable = "no"
  )

Update: In the process of updating this post I’m noticing that specifying the viewport metadata tag doesn’t seem to be necessary anymore, and I don’t understand why 🤔 …so I’ll leave the step as is, just in case it’s helpful to anyone 🤷🏽‍♀️

Adding social media tags

Then I added more metadata. I was particularly interested in adding social media tags so that if I (or anyone else) shared this map webpage, an informative preview would display as a social card.

I used the meta_social() function to add these tags:

# tags for social media
meta_social(
  title = "Philly CCD Sips 2022 Interactive Map",
  url = "https://www.silviacanelon.com/blog/2022-ccd-sips/map.html",
  image = "https://github.com/spcanelon/silvia/blob/main/content/blog/2022-05-31-ccd-sips/featured.png?raw=true",
  image_alt = "Map of Philly's Center City with a pop-up saying Center City District Sips 2022",
  og_type = "website",
  og_author = "Silvia Canelón",
  twitter_card_type = "summary_large_image",
  twitter_creator = "@spcanelon"
)

Great, I had added all of the metadata I was interested in! Except that because I was using Quarto, and not one of the more common outputs I had a couple of extra steps to take:

  1. Write my metadata tags to an HTML file, using the write_meta() function:

    # write meta tags to file
    write_meta(path = "meta-map.html")
  2. Manually include this HTML in my webpage via the Quarto file. The include-in-header Quarto YAML option helped me here:

    include-in-header: meta-map.html

Making the map fullscreen

A side effect of creating the map from a Quarto (or R Markdown) document is that the output is styled by default to fit within the width of an article (in this case 900 pixels). I wanted the map to take up the whole width of the page, so I made use of the page-layout Quarto YAML option:

format: 
  html:
    page-layout: custom

Another option that worked pretty well was to use the column: screen code chunk option built into Quarto. The Quarto documentation even shows an example to display a Leaflet map I but it left a thin margin at the top margin, and I wanted the map to be flush against the top edge of the webpage.

Rendering the standalone map

Lastly, I added one more option to the YAML that would render the Quarto document into a self-contained HTML with all of the content needed to create the map.

format:
  html:
    page-layout: custom
    self-contained: true
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Reuse

Citation

For attribution, please cite this work as:
Canelón, Silvia. 2022. “Philly Center City District Sips 2022: An Interactive Map.” May 31, 2022. https://silviacanelon.com/blog/2022-05-31-ccd-sips.