Wildfire Evacuation Map Infographic Prompt

Create AI image prompts for wildfire evacuation map infographics, preparedness handouts, route visuals, shelter markers, and public-safety layout concepts.

Prompt Template

You are a public-safety visual designer and AI image prompt engineer creating concept visuals for wildfire evacuation map infographics. These are design drafts only, not official emergency maps. Build prompts for:

Jurisdiction or setting: [small town, mountain community, rural county, campground, school district, resort area]
Map purpose: [evacuation zones, shelter routes, road closure explainer, preparedness flyer, community meeting poster]
Audience: [residents, tourists, older adults, multilingual households, parents, businesses, campground visitors]
Map inputs available: [official GIS map, road list, zones, shelter locations, landmarks, fire perimeter, none yet]
Required visual elements: [main roads, zone labels, shelter icons, assembly points, animal shelter, blocked roads, legend, north arrow]
Text strategy: [placeholder labels only, large headline area, multilingual space, QR placeholder, no readable details]
Style: [municipal clean, high-contrast emergency, calm preparedness, newspaper explainer, simple vector look]
Color needs: [evacuation red, warning orange, safe green, accessible contrast, grayscale print option]
Format: [8.5x11 flyer, social square, website banner, mobile story, presentation slide]
Safety constraints: [must not be used as official map, avoid fake addresses, verify routes with authorities, avoid panic imagery]
Image model: [Midjourney, DALL-E 3, Stable Diffusion, Firefly]

Create:
1. Primary infographic prompt with map composition, legend, route arrows, icons, and placeholder labels.
2. High-contrast printable handout prompt.
3. Mobile alert graphic prompt with simplified route and shelter callouts.
4. Community meeting poster prompt that leaves space for official details.
5. Negative prompt for fake street names, tiny unreadable text, inaccurate scale, flames covering routes, clutter, and official-looking false seals.
6. Accessibility notes for color contrast, icon redundancy, type hierarchy, and language space.
7. Post-generation checklist for replacing all map content with verified GIS and emergency-management data.

Keep the result clearly conceptual. Do not produce or imply official evacuation instructions unless verified source data is supplied.

Example Output

Primary Prompt

Clean public-safety infographic concept for a wildfire evacuation map of a small mountain town, simplified top-down map layout with three color-coded evacuation zones, bold route arrows leading away from the foothills toward two generic shelter icons, clear legend box with placeholder labels, north arrow, QR placeholder, high-contrast red orange green palette, accessible icon plus pattern coding, municipal emergency handout design, 8.5x11 portrait, crisp vector-like shapes, large blank areas for official street names and translated instructions, no real addresses, no official seal.

Negative Prompt

Fake street names, real emergency authority logos, tiny unreadable text, chaotic flames covering evacuation routes, photorealistic disaster scene, inaccurate-looking road spaghetti, cluttered legend, panic imagery, false shelter names.

Review Checklist

Replace every road, zone, shelter, and closure with verified GIS data. Confirm color contrast in print. Add official source, date, and revision number only after emergency-management review.

Tips for Best Results

  • 💡Treat AI output as a layout concept, never as official emergency information.
  • 💡Ask for verified map inputs and a post-generation replacement workflow.
  • 💡Use patterns plus colors so zone differences survive grayscale printing and color-vision differences.
  • 💡Reserve space for translation and source/date details from the start.