U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) data release presents a digital database of geospatially enabled vector layers and tabular data transcribed from the geologic map of the Lake Owen quadrangle, Albany County, Wyoming, which was originally published as U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map GQ-1304 (Houston and Orback, 1976). The 7.5-minute Lake Owen quadrangle is located in southeastern Wyoming approximately 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Laramie in the west-central interior of southern Albany County, and covers most of the southern extent of Sheep Mountain, the southeastern extent of Centennial Valley, and a portion of the eastern Medicine Bow Mountains. This relational geodatabase, with georeferenced data layers digitized at the publication scale of 1:24,000, organizes and describes the geologic and structural data covering the quadrangle's approximately 35,954 acres and enables the data for use in spatial analyses and computer cartography. The data types present ...
Municipality boundaries for Albany County, NY. These boundaries do not change to often. Annexations occasionally happen that go through the Real Property Tax Service Agency who work with Planning to update the GIS data.9/2023: Voorheesville/New Scotland boundary update.
The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. Face refers to the areal (polygon) topological primitives that make up MTDB. A face is bounded by one or more edges; its boundary includes only the edges that separate it from other faces, not any interior edges contained within the area of the face. The Topological Faces Shapefile contains the attributes of each topological primitive face. Each face has a unique topological face identifier (TFID) value. Each face in the shapefile includes the key geographic area codes for all geographic areas for which the Census Bureau tabulates data for both the 2020 Census and the annual estimates and surveys. The geometries of each of these geographic areas can then be built by dissolving the face geometries on the appropriate key geographic area codes in the Topological Faces Shapefile.
The web map includes active and inactive Neighborhoods Associations within the City of Albany,
New York. A Neighborhood Association in Albany can be described as a
group of residents, property owners or stakeholders of a defined area,
who have voluntarily organized themselves in order to advocate for their
common interests and needs, as well as to preserve, protect and enhance
their surrounding environment within the community. Neighborhood Associations
are organized independent of City government. The community establishes boundaries based on a
fusion of social and geographic factors (rather than legislative
districts), where local (neighborhood) members freely self-identify and volunteer their
participation and support. Albany's Neighborhood Associations may have an elected leader,
established bylaws, and/or require dues from their members. Neighborhood Associations help facilitate quality of life
improvements, mitigate issues, and provide a platform for community
involvement. They create a sense of identity for our residents and are
regarded by City government as a valuable resource for communication.
We encourage you to find and be involved with your local Neighborhood!If you have an update for this dataset, we would like to hear from you. Please contact:City of Albany Department of Planning and Development200 Henry Johnson BlvdAlbany, NY 12210(518) 465-6066ddp@albanyny.gov
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
In an urban setting, parks are created and allocated to serve a broad range of public needs. Accessible green space is an essential way to improve quality of life—providing opportunities from active healthy living to environmental resiliency. Parks strengthen our families and our Neighborhoods, and are designed to creatively bring us together as a community. While parks and green space, as a whole, are appreciated for recreation,
open space offers other types of opportunities, such as designed
sustainable initiatives, improving the local watershed, expanding green
technology or transportation alternatives.A green space inventory, in part with the Albany 2030 Comprehensive Plan,
was conducted to identify areas where the community has access to
outdoor areas within a quarter-mile (or 15-minute) walking radius. Therefore this GIS inventory does not just include official City-managed parks, but combines lists and observances where other accessible open space exists (such as, pocket parks, community gardens, dog parks, sites of beautification, historic landmarks, road medians, etc.) that offer an opportunity for active recreation, passive enjoyment or sustainability initiatives (i.e., multi-use paths, stormwater management, etc.). The properties are managed jointly by the Department of Recreation and
the Department of General Services. The City continues to implement
its Park Renovation Plan, a
City-funded effort to upgrade play spaces with improved accessibility,
playground equipment, and picnic areas for people of all ages and
abilities, in compliance with the Americans With Disabilities Act. Albany is 25% green
space—almost three times the recommended recreational acres-to-person
ratio, according to the National Recreation & Park Association. This list of open space continues to grow and change along
with recreational opportunities, maintenance support, funding sources, and community needs.
Resources
City Departments work in collaboration to help support and facilitate green space needs and improvements throughout the City.
Department of RecreationDepartment of General ServicesPlanning DepartmentWater & Water SupplyReport property issues on SeeClickFixFind Park programs and activities at The RecDesk
This resource is a member of a series. The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) System (MTS). The MTS represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The All Roads shapefile includes all features within the MTS Super Class "Road/Path Features" distinguished where the MAF/TIGER Feature Classification Code (MTFCC) for the feature in the MTS that begins with "S". This includes all primary, secondary, local neighborhood, and rural roads, city streets, vehicular trails (4wd), ramps, service drives, alleys, parking lot roads, private roads for service vehicles (logging, oil fields, ranches, etc.), bike paths or trails, bridle/horse paths, walkways/pedestrian trails, and stairways.
Albany County, New York, tax parcel boundaries with limited property information.A tax map is a special purpose map, accurately drawn to scale showing all the real property parcels within a city, town or village. These maps are used to locate parcels and obtain other information required in assessment work. The size, shape and dimensions (or acreage) of a parcel may be found on a tax map. Tax maps are primarily used by local governments to maintain a current inventory of all parcels in a city, town or village.Tax parcel boundaries are maintained by the Albany County Real Property Tax Service Agency. Albany County provides the municipalities with digital GIS files on an annual basis. Therefore, all parcel boundary changes may not be reflected in this GIS file, depending on the revision date.Real Property Information, as recorded and managed by the local municipal assessor is updated annually using the final roll taxable status date March 1 by the County and also may not be reflecting the most current information, depending on the information revision date.
CDPHP Cycle Station Locations & Rental Service Areas - metadata info: CDPHP Cycle! is a bike-share program offered through CDTA in partnership with CDPHP. CDTA Bus Stops - metadata info:CDTA Bus Stops for the Capital District area including Albany, Schenectady, Troy, and Saratoga Counties. Dataset includes StopID, Lat, Long, Description, isPublic, and Zip code. CDTA Bus Routes - metadata info:CDTA Bus Routes for the Capital District area including Albany, Schenectady, Troy, and Saratoga Counties. Spatial Reference of Source Data: NAD 83, State Plane New York East, FIPS 3101 Feet. Spatial Reference of Web Service: WGS 1984 Web Mercator Auxiliary Sphere. Data current as of May 2025. Contact Information:Dave SalamackScheduling Systems Project ManagerCapital District Transportation Authority (CDTA)85 Watervliet AvenueAlbany, New York 12206PH: (518) 437-6864DavidS@cdta.org
These data provide an accurate high-resolution shoreline compiled from imagery of PORT OF ALBANY, NY . This vector shoreline data is based on an office interpretation of imagery that may be suitable as a geographic information system (GIS) data layer. This metadata describes information for both the line and point shapefiles. The NGS attribution scheme 'Coastal Cartographic Object Attribute Source Table (C-COAST)' was developed to conform the attribution of various sources of shoreline data into one attribution catalog. C-COAST is not a recognized standard, but was influenced by the International Hydrographic Organization's S-57 Object-Attribute standard so the data would be more accurately translated into S-57. This resource is a member of https://res1wwwd-o-tfisheriesd-o-tnoaad-o-tgov.vcapture.xyz/inport/item/39808
CDTA Bus Stops - metadata info:
CDTA Bus Stops for the Capital District area including Albany, Schenectady, Troy, and Saratoga Counties. Dataset includes StopID, Lat, Long, Description, isPublic, and Zip code. Spatial Reference of Source Data: NAD 83, StatePlane New York East, FIPS 3101 Feet. Spatial Reference of Web Service: WGS 1984 Web Mercator Auxiliary Sphere.
Data current as of August 2025.
An official index map of tax maps by municipality for the County of Berks Assessment Department.
Local Wetlands Inventory areas in the City of Albany. Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
Digital Data from VG09-4 (Digitized draft of VG97-5): Kim, J., 2009, Bedrock geologic map of parts of the Eden, Albany, Lowell, and Irasburg quadrangles, VGS Open-File Report VG09-4, 1 plate, scale 1:24000. The bedrock geologic map data at a scale of 1:24,000 depicts types of bedrock underlying unconsolidated materials in Vermont. Data is created by mapping on the ground using standard geologic pace and compass techniques and/or GPS on a USGS 1:24000 topographic base map. Data may be organized by town, quadrangle or watershed. Each data bundle may includes point, line and polygon data and some or all of the following: 1) contacts (lithogic contacts), 2) fault_brittle, 3) fault_ductile, 4) fault_thrust, 5) fault_bed_plane (bedding plane thrust), 6) bedding, 7) bedding_graded (graded bedding) 8) bedding_overturn (overturned bedding), 9) bedding_select (selected points for published map), 10) foliation_n1, n2, n3 etc (foliation data), 11) outcrop (exposed outcrops), 12) field_station (outcrop and data collection point), 13) fold_axis, 14) axial_plane, 15) lamprophyre, 16) water_well_log (water well driller information), 16) linear_int (intersection lineation), 17) linear_str (stretching lineation) 18) x_section_line (line of cross-section), and photolinear (lineaments identified from air photos). Other feature classes may be included with each data bundle. (https://dec.vermont.gov/geological-survey/publication-gis/ofr).
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
A web application showing locally and Nationally registered historic districts, places and archaeologically sensitive places in the City of Albany, New York. Historic Districts. Locally designated historic district boundaries in Albany, New York were established to preserve and protect places, sites, buildings, structures, works of art and other objects having a special character, special historic or aesthetic interest, or any other particular value to the City. Albany's Historic Resources Commission is appointed to administer and regulate the appearance in these local historic districts; protect their significant character; and safeguard the archaeological or cultural integrity in the best interest of the community. Though some delineated areas are also designated under state and federal programs (see National Register of Historic Places), the City only maintains oversight and applies its laws and regulations to properties within the locally adopted districts. Zoning Overlays. All development projects proposed in the City of Albany must comply with the newly adopted Unified Sustainable Development Ordinance (USDO). Overlays are a unique set of zoning codes that are superimposed on one or more established zoning district, and subsequently impose in addition to, or in place of, the regulations of the underlying zoning district(s). The Historic Resources Overlay (HR-O) and the Archaeological Resources Overlay (AR-O), as part of the USDO, incorporates previously established laws and updated regulations to protect assets in all locally-designated Historic Districts and the Downtown Archaeological Review District. Archaeological Review. The AR-O is an archaeologically sensitive area in Downtown Albany, and is deemed to have special significance by virtue of its location within the earliest settled portion of the City (which comprised of a 17th-century stockaded community), known as Fort Orange. All (re)development efforts undergo additional compliance review due to the sensitive nature and historic significance of the area. Any subsurface excavation in this area is required to conduct a cultural resource survey (also referred to as a "Phase IA or IIA Cultural Resource Investigation") as part of the environmental and site plan review. Historic Sites. These historic buildings, structures, sites or properties have significant historic, social, cultural or community value to the City. Some of these historic points of interest are designated for local preservation, or they have been registered with New York State and/or federal preservation programs (the NYS Preservation Office). For more information, please visit: City of AlbanyDepartment of Planning and Development200 Henry Johnson BlvdAlbany, NY 12210 (518) 465-6066 hrc@albanyny.gov
This U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) data release provides a digital geospatial database for the geologic map of Precambrian metasedimentary rocks of the Medicine Bow Mountains, Albany and Carbon Counties, Wyoming (Houston and Karlstrom, 1992). Attribute tables and geospatial features (points, lines and polygons) conform to the Geologic Map Schema (GeMS, 2020) and represent the geologic map plates as published at a scale of 1:50,000. The 358,697-acre map area includes the geologically complex Medicine Bow Mountains located 30 miles (48 kilometers) west of Laramie in southeastern Wyoming. References: Houston, R.S., and Karlstrom, K.E., 1992, Geologic map of Precambrian metasedimentary rocks of the Medicine Bow Mountains, Albany and Carbon Counties, Wyoming: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I-2280, scale 1:50,000, https://doi.org/10.3133/i2280. U.S. Geological Survey National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, 2020, GeMS (Geologic Map Schema) - A standard format for the digital publication of geologic maps: U.S. Geological Survey Techniques and Methods, book 11, chap. B10, 74 p., https://doi.org//10.3133/tm11B10.
Roads owned by Albany County. Data was extracted from the NYS Streets layer from the NYS GIS Clearinghouse. Each road was dissolved, based on name, FCC, ACC and Speed, to one polyline for use in AGOL.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This feature class is used for cartographic purposes, for generating statistical data, and for clipping data. Ideally, state and federal agencies should be using the same framework data for common themes such as county boundaries. This layer provides an initial offering as "best available" at 1:24,000 scale for counties.Incorporated cities were merged from the Board of Equalization's 11/16/2021 City and County boundaries dataset. The Cal Fire FRAP County boundaries v 19_1 were maintained for consistency with other use in CA Nature.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Layer downloaded from US Fish and Wildlife - https://www.fws.gov/program/national-wetlands-inventory/wetlands-data The site also offers the data either as a REST or WMS service. The REST performance was not good, and I could not get the WMS layer to display. Not sure if this was performance related as well. Could be my laptop, not sure. Will need to try with desktop when I get it. I downloaded the NYS layer and clipped it using the clip tool in Pro. Data was uploaded to County AGOL organization. Data is updated on the above site twice a year, so this layer should be refreshed each year. This data set represents the extent, approximate location and type of wetlands and deepwater habitats in the United States and its Territories. These data delineate the areal extent of wetlands and surface waters as defined by Cowardin et al. (1979). The National Wetlands Inventory - Version 2, Surface Waters and Wetlands Inventory was derived by retaining the wetland and deepwater polygons that compose the NWI digital wetlands spatial data layer and reintroducing any linear wetland or surface water features that were orphaned from the original NWI hard copy maps by converting them to narrow polygonal features. Additionally, the data are supplemented with hydrography data, buffered to become polygonal features, as a secondary source for any single-line stream features not mapped by the NWI and to complete segmented connections. Wetland mapping conducted in WA, OR, CA, NV and ID after 2012 and most other projects mapped after 2015 were mapped to include all surface water features and are not derived data. The linear hydrography dataset used to derive Version 2 was the U.S. Geological Survey's National Hydrography Dataset (NHD). Specific information on the NHD version used to derive Version 2 and where Version 2 was mapped can be found in the 'comments' field of the Wetlands_Project_Metadata feature class. Certain wetland habitats are excluded from the National mapping program because of the limitations of aerial imagery as the primary data source used to detect wetlands. These habitats include seagrasses or submerged aquatic vegetation that are found in the intertidal and subtidal zones of estuaries and near shore coastal waters. Some deepwater reef communities (coral or tuberficid worm reefs) have also been excluded from the inventory. These habitats, because of their depth, go undetected by aerial imagery. By policy, the Service also excludes certain types of "farmed wetlands" as may be defined by the Food Security Act or that do not coincide with the Cowardin et al. definition. Contact the Service's Regional Wetland Coordinator for additional information on what types of farmed wetlands are included on wetland maps. This dataset should be used in conjunction with the Wetlands_Project_Metadata layer, which contains project specific wetlands mapping procedures and information on dates, scales and emulsion of imagery used to map the wetlands within specific project boundaries.
Disclaimer: There is no cost to the end user for this data, however, all users agree to the following disclaimer by virtue of downloading any Albany GIS data. The City of Albany's Infrastructure records, drawings, and other documents have been gathered over many decades, using differing standards for quality control, documentation, and verification. All of the data provided represents current information in a readily available format. While the data provided is generally believed to be accurate, occasionally it proves to be incorrect; thus its accuracy is not warranted. Prior to making any property purchases or other investments based in full or in part upon the material provided, it is specifically advised that you independently field verify the information contained within our records.
CDTA Bus Routes - meta info:
CDTA Bus Routes for the Capital District area including Albany, Schenectady, Troy, and Saratoga Counties. Spatial Reference of Source Data: NAD 83, State Plane New York East, FIPS 3101 Feet. Spatial Reference of Web Service: WGS 1984 Web Mercator Auxiliary Sphere.
Data current as of August 2025.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) data release presents a digital database of geospatially enabled vector layers and tabular data transcribed from the geologic map of the Lake Owen quadrangle, Albany County, Wyoming, which was originally published as U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map GQ-1304 (Houston and Orback, 1976). The 7.5-minute Lake Owen quadrangle is located in southeastern Wyoming approximately 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Laramie in the west-central interior of southern Albany County, and covers most of the southern extent of Sheep Mountain, the southeastern extent of Centennial Valley, and a portion of the eastern Medicine Bow Mountains. This relational geodatabase, with georeferenced data layers digitized at the publication scale of 1:24,000, organizes and describes the geologic and structural data covering the quadrangle's approximately 35,954 acres and enables the data for use in spatial analyses and computer cartography. The data types present ...