Click here to open the ArcGIS Online 3D Map Viewer and work through the examples shown belowTo add 3D data to ArcGIS Online you will need a login for an ArcGIS Online account. We would recommend that you use a free schools subscription (full functionality) or the free public account (reduced functionality).Login to ArcGIS OnlineChoose a location that you would like to visit and a create a 3D tour
Click here to open the ArcGIS Online 3D Map Viewer and work through the examples shown belowTo add 3D data to ArcGIS Online you will need a login for an ArcGIS Online account. We would recommend that you use a free schools subscription (full functionality) or the free public account (reduced functionality).Login to ArcGIS OnlineFind Mount Everest and save the 3D map so that it opens with an amazing view of the mountainShare your 3D map with a friend or colleague and get some feed back
Click here to open the ArcGIS Online 3D Map Viewer and work through the examples shown belowTo add 3D data to ArcGIS Online you will need a login for an ArcGIS Online account. We would recommend that you use a free schools subscription (full functionality) or the free public account (reduced functionality).Login to ArcGIS OnlineSearch for layers in ArcGIS Online:
OVERVIEWThis site is dedicated to raising the level of spatial and data literacy used in public policy. We invite you to explore curated content, training, best practices, and datasets that can provide a baseline for your research, analysis, and policy recommendations. Learn about emerging policy questions and how GIS can be used to help come up with solutions to those questions.EXPLOREGo to your area of interest and explore hundreds of maps about various topics such as social equity, economic opportunity, public safety, and more. Browse and view the maps, or collect them and share via a simple URL. Sharing a collection of maps is an easy way to use maps as a tool for understanding. Help policymakers and stakeholders use data as a driving factor for policy decisions in your area.ISSUESBrowse different categories to find data layers, maps, and tools. Use this set of content as a driving force for your GIS workflows related to policy. RESOURCESTo maximize your experience with the Policy Maps, we’ve assembled education, training, best practices, and industry perspectives that help raise your data literacy, provide you with models, and connect you with the work of your peers.
This document is a 12-page PDF document that is part instruction, part self-assessment tool, part helpfile reference tool. Users are taken from accessing ArcGIS Online without login, through ArcGIS Online public account, to ArcGIS Online Organization account. Quickly browsable content chunks let users scan topics and focus on those skills and concepts with which they have not yet grown comfortable.
Click here to open the ArcGIS Online Map Viewer and work through the examples shown belowTo add data to ArcGIS Online we reccomend that you log in. For full functionality use a free schools subscription, or if this is not possible you can use a free public account which will have reduced functionality.
Note: This is a large dataset. To download, go to ArcGIS Open Data Set and click the download button, and under additional resources select the shapefile or geodatabase option. A land survey point from a GCDB LX file, survey plat, or captured from a CFF land net coverage. Includes points generated by calculating an aliquot breakdown of a section.
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Public Restroom dataset.
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Public Artwork Outside Park dataset.
FAF Zones of concern were created to display areas that may be problematic for fire fighters, and for home owners to know the risks near or on their property or subdivision. The zones were created based on vegetation structure and access. This data has not been updated i recent years. It is still relevant but has not taken into account new construction for the past 10 years in the Fairbanks North Star Borough.
Content provided in this feature is presented as points. These points help visualize the locations of Tempe's diverse collection of permanent and temporary public art. Tempe Public Art promotes artistic expression, bringing people together to strengthen Tempe's sense of community and place. Additional Information:Source: City of TempeContact (author): Contact E-Mail (author): Contact (maintainer): Contact E-Mail (maintainer): Data Source Type: ArcGIS Feature LayerPreparation Method: Data are updated in ArcGIS OnlinePublish Frequency: OngoingPublish Method: Automatically as data are editedData Dictionary (pending update)
These geocoded locations are based on the Allegheny County extract of Educational Names & Addresses (EdNA) via Pennsylvania Department of Education website as of April 19, 2018. Several addresses were not able to be geocoded (ex. If PO Box addresses were provided, they were not geocoded.)If viewing this description on the Western Pennsylvania Regional Data Center’s open data portal (http://www.wprdc.org), this dataset is harvested on a weekly basis from Allegheny County’s GIS data portal (http://openac.alcogis.opendata.arcgis.com/). The full metadata record for this dataset can also be found on Allegheny County’s GIS portal. You can access the metadata record and other resources on the GIS portal by clicking on the “Explore” button (and choosing the “Go to resource” option) to the right of the “ArcGIS Open Dataset” text below. Category: Education Organization: Allegheny County Department: Department of Human Services Temporal Coverage: as of April 19, 2018 Data Notes: Coordinate System: GCS_North_American_1983 Development Notes: none Other: none Related Document(s): Data Dictionary - none Frequency - Data Change: April, 19, 2018 data Frequency - Publishing: one-time Data Steward Name: See http://www.edna.ed.state.pa.us/Screens/Extracts/wfExtractEntitiesAdmin.aspx for more information. Data Steward Email: RA-DDQDataCollection@pa.gov (Data Collection Team)
Seattle Parks and Recreation GIS Map Layer Shapefile - Public Art Outside Park
Shapefile - This Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer was exported from SPU ARCGIS and converted to a shapefile then manually uploaded to data.seattle.gov via Socrata.
OR
Web Services - Live "read only" data connection ESRI web services URL: http://gisrevprxy.seattle.gov/arcgis/rest/services/DPR_EXT/ParksExternalWebsite/MapServer/34
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
Utility layer maintained by the City of Salem Public Works Technical Services Team. Features are updated weekly though a Python script from SDE for viewing only in Salem Maps Online. This layer has been filtered (for security) and symbolized in ArcGIS Pro, and has custom popups created from the feature layer's Visualization tab. For unfiltered and data, reference the Internal Data Utilities layers in the SalemPW account.
Feature service generated by Hub for public Hub events. DO NOT DELETE THIS SERVICE. It stores the public Hub events for your organization.
Monitoring credits useage in an AGOL organization account, how to use the built-in tools and the Activity Dashboard to see what services are using how many credits in your organization
The Division of Forestry has been managing forest resources for many years in the Matunuska-Susitna Valley (Mat-Su) area. The purpose of this GIS layer, is to create a spatial coverage of vegetation on state lands to aid in forest management.
This data layer references data from a high-resolution tree canopy change-detection layer for Seattle, Washington. Tree canopy change was mapped by using remotely sensed data from two time periods (2016 and 2021). Tree canopy was assigned to three classes: 1) no change, 2) gain, and 3) loss. No change represents tree canopy that remained the same from one time period to the next. Gain represents tree canopy that increased or was newly added, from one time period to the next. Loss represents the tree canopy that was removed from one time period to the next. Mapping was carried out using an approach that integrated automated feature extraction with manual edits. Care was taken to ensure that changes to the tree canopy were due to actual change in the land cover as opposed to differences in the remotely sensed data stemming from lighting conditions or image parallax. Direct comparison was possible because land-cover maps from both time periods were created using object-based image analysis (OBIA) and included similar source datasets (LiDAR-derived surface models, multispectral imagery, and thematic GIS inputs). OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to ensure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. No accuracy assessment was conducted, but the dataset was subjected to manual review and correction.University of Vermont Spatial Analysis LaboratoryThis dataset consists of City of Seattle Public Schools areas which cover the following tree canopy categories:Existing tree canopy percentPossible tree canopy - vegetation percentRelative percent changeAbsolute percent changeFor more information, please see the 2021 Tree Canopy Assessment.
This feature layer is based on certified appraisal data obtained from each individual county's appraisal district for certified tax accounts in the city and a mile buffer around the City of Dallas.
The effort is currently in the advanced testing and integration stage.
All data displayed here is taken directly from the Certified Tax Rolls
In accordance with state guidelines concerning taxable property outlined here:
The tax code is here: https://texas.public.law/statutes/tex._tax_code_section_25.025
This service includes information about health facilities, for use in the state government application: My Health Services.Your ArcGIS Online organizational account allows you to use an existing service to publish an empty feature layer. This service can be consumed in web maps and applications to answer critical business questions. You can configure the My Health Services application provided in the ArcGIS for State Government solution for your organization. To complete the configuration, you will need experience with ArcGIS Online.
Click here to open the ArcGIS Online 3D Map Viewer and work through the examples shown belowTo add 3D data to ArcGIS Online you will need a login for an ArcGIS Online account. We would recommend that you use a free schools subscription (full functionality) or the free public account (reduced functionality).Login to ArcGIS OnlineChoose a location that you would like to visit and a create a 3D tour