On September 27, Dr. Sunkyu Lee, Dr. Taylor Zaneri, and Dr. Sander Molenaar will participate in the 5th Spatial Humanities Conference in Bamberg. Their paper, An End-to-End Open-Source Methodology For Spatial Humanities: From Textual Annotation to Spatial Analysis of Infrastructure in Late Imperial China, presents an open-source methodology developed by the InfraLives/RegInfra projects to investigate the construction and maintenance of infrastructure in late imperial China, and presents two case studies that demonstrate its application. The methodology encompasses the annotation of infrastructural events in inscriptions, the structuring of data into an event schema, spatial and network analysis, and the comparison of textual descriptions with corresponding visual sources. The first case study explores Buddhist involvement in bridge construction in Fujian, focusing on the roles of local non-state actors and religious networks influencing infrastructural development. The second case study examines the changes from rammed earth to masonry walls and associated cartographic changes in Shanxi, revealing how material changes in infrastructure were reflected in both texts and visual representations. The paper concludes by emphasizing the methodology's generalizability and adaptability for other spatial humanities research.