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Official City of Cleveland Parks and Recreation Centers viewing application. This app contains information on the following:Recreation CentersOutdoor Recreation AmenitiesCity ParksCity Park AmenitiesMultiuse TrailsCleveland MetroparksClick here to use or download the underlying data for this application. Instructions Click on any feature to learn more about it.Use the icons on the upper left hand corner to do the following:Present a legend of viewable features.Toggle layers.Search for a specific feature.Get directions to a location on the map. Update Frequency⚠️This dataset is not currently being updated. Maintenance is temporarily paused until City staff are onboarded in Fall 2025. (Update as of 8/28/25) This application uses the following dataset(s):Cleveland Parks and Recreation System ContactsJay Rauschenbach, Parks & Recreation Planning Manager, jrauschenbach@clevelandohio.gov
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TO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOW DescriptionVersion 6 Location data for the 15 Minute Neighborhood analysis corresponding 15 Minute City Index . These are various amenities and points of interest that City Planning collected city-wide. Using these locations, City Planning generated appropriate walksheds (how far you can walk within a certain time) that were then used in our 15 Minute City model that combines all walksheds into a weighted score of "access". The animation below demonstrates how all the different locations are combined according to weight to create a total index score. The higher the score, the more services, amenities, and stores someone can walk to from that point. This indicates what is nearby but we understand there are many other factors that affect "walkability", like urban design, safety, culture, street design, and more.This work is preliminary and in development. City Planning assumes no liability regarding accuracy or usage of this information.This data is a work in progress that City Planning is using for exploratory planning research, and not an authoritative collection of all locations. Data GlossarySee the Attributes section below for details about each column in this dataset.This dataset is featured on the following app(s):15-Minute City Planning Introduction Story Map Update FrequencyAnnually ContactsCleveland City Planning Commission, Strategic Initiativescityplanning@clevelandohio.gov
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TO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOW. Point and polygon layers encompassing the parks and recreation system for the City of Cleveland, including:Boundaries of parks including those associated with a recreational facility (polygon)Amenities in a park (point)Locations and major amenities of recreational facilities (point)Update FrequencyAs updates occur.⚠️This dataset is not currently being updated. Maintenance is temporarily paused until City staff are onboarded in Fall 2025. (Update as of 8/28/25) This dataset is used in the following application(s):City of Cleveland Parks and Recreation Map Viewer ContactsJay Rauschenbach, Parks & Recreation Planning Manager, jrauschenbach@clevelandohio.gov
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TO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOWDescriptionPolygon layer containing American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimate data for the most recent vintage (currently 2019–2023). Data is filtered for Cuyahoga County, OH, with additional calculations to determine the city for each census tract. This allows filtering for Cleveland and surrounding suburbs. This dataset is sourced from the ArcGIS Living Atlas and uses information from data.census.gov.This dataset is featured on the following app(s):City Census ViewerData GlossaryField aliases have been provided that explain each field. See Attributes below. For more technical methodology, visit the U.S. Census Bureau website for the American Community Survey.Update FrequencyUpdated annually in December with the release of the new ACS vintage.ContactsSamuel Martinez, Urban Analytics and Innovationsmartinez2@clevelandohio.gov
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TO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOW The Cleveland Climate Action Plan (CAP) Dashboard is a companion to the updated Climate Action Plan (CAP), which will guide our work from 2025 to 2029 and strive to reduce pollution, create jobs, and protect our communities from climate impacts. More than 150 stakeholders from over 100 institutions, community-based organizations, and advocacy groups guided the development of this plan. The City also relied on input from more than 1,000 residents to ensure this CAP is truly a plan from the community. This updated CAP is designed to guide implementation to position our city as a climate leader, ensuring that our community can overcome obstacles, and achieve our ambitious climate goals. This dashboard includes three different components:Emissions: Data on emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) from across Cleveland from 2010-2022. This section provides annual data on GHG emissions from all key sectors, including Stationary Energy (Residential, Commercial and Industrial Energy use, Fugitive Emissions/leaks from natural gas infrastructure), Transportation (on-road vehicles, aviation, waterborne transportation), Industrial Processes and Process Use (IPUU) (e.g. emissions from iron and steel production), and Waste (solid waste and wastewater treatment),.Transitions: Transitions describe shifts from activities that produce large amounts of GHG emissions to low to zero emissions activities. These transitions, which correspond to the Goals and Objectives from Cleveland’s CAP, include clear targets and projected GHG reductions that allow the City to track progress over time.Interventions: Interventions are the policies, projects, initiatives and commitments to make the transition to net zero happen. They describe the “how” the City plans to implement Transitions. Interventions correspond to CAP Actions. Documentation and DefinitionsGreenhouse Gases (GHG): Types of gases that trap heat from the sun and contribute to global warming. The primary greenhouse gases in Earth’s atmosphere are water vapor (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), ozone (O3), and some fluorinated gasesGHG Inventory: Tools that communities use to measure, calculate, and assess emissions of GHGs associated with activities and sources occurring within a community.Transitions: Shifts from activities that produce large amounts of GHG emissions to low to zero emissions activities.Interventions: The policies, projects, initiatives and commitments to make the transition to net zero happen. They describe the “how” the City plans to implement Transitions. Update Frequency Annually Contacts Tim Kovach, Mayor's Office of Sustainability and Climate Justice, tkovach@clevelandohio.gov
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TO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOWDescriptionThis dataset was created in late 2021 using the Census Bureau's redistricting PL 94-171 dataset. The block-level data is the official release of Census results, provided in a text format that requires processing via R or other statistical software. City Planning ran analysis of the Census results by aggregating data by city neighborhoods and comparing it to 2010 results to help the City and others understand how Cleveland's demographics changed from 2010 to 2020.This dataset is featured in the following app(s):Census 2020 in Cleveland Story MapTransit Oriented Development in ClevelandData GlossarySee the Attributes section in each layer below for information concerning fields.Update FrequencyStaticContactsCleveland City Planning Commission, Zoning & TechnologyDro Sohrabian, dsohrabian@clevelandohio.gov
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DescriptionThis dataset contains the official City of Cleveland ward boundaries for 2026 and beyond. These boundaries were drawn and approved in 2025 following the passage of Ordinance No. 1-2025 by Cleveland City Council on January 6, 2025. The new wards will be used in the Fall 2025 elections, with terms beginning in January 2026. For more information, refer to the Ward Redistricting Info page on the Cleveland City Council website and Section § 25-1 Reapportionment of Wards of the City Charter regarding Reapportionment of Wards. The source data was provided by City Council on January 7, 2025.Data GlossarySee the Attributes section below for details about each column in this dataset.Update FrequencyStatic (does not change)ContactsCleveland City Council
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DescriptionThis dataset includes a multimodal assessment of the Cleveland Transportation Network, conducted as part of the Cleveland Moves initiative. It evaluates need and comfort levels to improve safety and mobility on Cleveland streets.The Pedestrian Crossing Level of Stress layer was created by Toole Design and uses attributes such as number of lanes, speed limit, and presence of pedestrian islands to assess crossing stress. Data sources include Ohio and City of Cleveland street and intersection data (2024).The Bicycle Level of Traffic Stress layer, also developed by Toole Design, evaluates stress for cyclists based on lane count, speed limit, bikeway type, and other factors. This data was also generated in 2024.The ODOT Active Transportation Need layer was developed by the Ohio Department of Transportation. It incorporates factors such as vehicle access and poverty rates to determine transportation need.Update FrequencyThis dataset will be updated with additional analysis from the Cleveland Moves planning process by early 2025. After that, updates will occur annually to reflect changes aimed at improving safety and mobility.Related ApplicationsA summary of this dataset is available in the Cleveland Moves Network Assessment Dashboard.The ODOT Active Transportation Need dataset was developed by the Ohio Department of Transportation. More information is available on their website: ODOT GlossaryContactsSarah Davis, Active Transportation Senior Plannersdavis2@clevelandohio.gov
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DescriptionThis layer contains address point data for all of Cuyahoga County and portions of surrounding counties within the Cleveland Water Department (CWD) service area. It is maintained by the City of Cleveland Department of Public Utilities GIS staff.
Cleveland Water service may not be available to all of these addresses.
Call 216-664-2444 x75209 for specific information.
Data GlossarySee the Attributes section below for details about each column in this dataset.
Update Frequency
Maintained regularly. Changes are made as new addresses or corrections are identified.
Contact
Report errors or issues to
jotham_hall@clevelandwater.com.
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Weekly snapshot of Cleveland City Planning Commission datasets that are featured on the City Planning Zoning Viewer. For the official, most current record of zoning info, use the CPC Zoning Viewer.This file is an open-source geospatial (GIS) format called GeoPackage, which can contain multiple layers. It is similar to Esri's file geodatabase format. Free and open-source GIS software like QGIS, or software like ArcGIS, can read the information to view the tables and map the information.It includes the following mapping layers officially maintained by Cleveland City Planning Commission:Planner Assignment AreasPlanned Unit Development OverlayResidential FacilitiesResidential Facilities 1000 ft. BufferPolice DistrictsLandmarks / Historic LayersLocal Landmark PointsLocal Landmark ParcelsLocal Landmark DistrictsNational Historic DistrictsCentral Business DistrictDesign Review RegionsDesign Review DistrictsOverlay Frontage LinesForm & PRO Overlay DistrictsLive-Work Overlay DistrictsSpecific SetbacksStreet CenterlinesZoningUpdate FrequencyWeekly on Mondays at 4:30 AMContactCity Planning Commission, Zoning & Technology
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The list of schools includes all charter and community schools in addition to those governed by CMSD.
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This is an all-purpose viewer application for the Cleveland property survey 2022 results. It offers a lookup tool, various heat maps, and reporting by criteria that the user can choose.InstructionsViewer pageThe main view for looking up and searching property surveys. The heatmap is fixed to show clusters of D and F properties to guide the user's eyes to areas to explore further.Heatmaps pageExplore different clusters of the grades in this view. Switching back to Viewer will pan the map to the same place.Charts pageSee summary statistics about a given selection of property surveys, starting by default with all surveys. Use filters on the left to narrow down your interest and understand relationships between variables.Data GlossaryFor more information about the dataset, see the City-version of 2022 WRLC Property Survey layerThis app uses the following dataset(s):Citywide Property Survey 2022ContactsDro Sohrabian, Urban Analytics & Innovation
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TwitterSurvey Parcels with CAMA Real Property characteristics. Point parcels have been converted to polygons and appended, along with the air parcel polygons, for a single parcel featureclass. The layer only contains parcels with a listed city of Cleveland. LAST UPDATED JUNE 2025.View theData Dictionary.
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⚠️Due to the City's transition to a new Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) system, the Police Calls for Service data, dashboards and maps on this site currently include records only through 11/14/25. Regular updates are paused to align and unify old and new data models, but we aim to restore fully automated daily updates by the end of 2025.This transition does not impact Public Safety systems or operations. Data for the pause period (from 11/14/25 until integration completion) is still available upon request via the City’s public records portal. Thank you for your patience!Data from City of Cleveland Public Safety's Computer-aided Dispatch (CAD) system on calls for Cleveland Division of Police service. Includes information on call time, priority, type, and location.Data starts with calls from 2021. The data provided is the latest available information and is updated regularly as statistics change.Map points show approximate locations of police calls for service, including 911 calls. Locations are adjusted to the nearest road, and full addresses are not provided to protect individual privacy. The City strives to provide the highest-quality information on this platform. The content on this website is provided as a public service, on an ‘as is’ basis. The City makes no warranty, representation, or guarantee of any type as to the content, accuracy, timeliness, completeness, or fitness for any particular purpose or use of any public data provided on this portal; nor shall any such warranty be implied, including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. The City assumes no liability by making data available to the public or other departments. Update FrequencyDaily around 8:30AM Eastern Related data item(s):Police Calls for Service Dataset Police Calls for Service Dashboard Contacts City of Cleveland, Division of Police InstructionsZoom into an area of the city you are interested in.Search for an address to zoom to that location.Filter by call date or call type.Use the map layers tool to add police districts, wards, or neighborhoods to the map.Use the advanced query tool to view calls within a certain distance of a point or area.
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⚠️Due to the City's transition to a new Record Management System (RMS) , the Crime Incidents data, dashboards and maps on this site currently include records only through 11/18/25. Regular updates are paused to align and unify old and new data models. We aim to restore fully automated daily updates by the end of 2025.This transition does not impact Public Safety systems or operations. Data for the pause period (from 11/18/25 until integration completion) is still available upon request via the City’s public records portal. Thank you for your patience!This mapping application visualizes crime incidents across the City of Cleveland. The data includes details on the type, location, and time of each reported crime, enabling users to analyze crime patterns and trends. The data provided is the latest available information and is updated regularly as statistics change. For access to comprehensive reports, kindly submit a public record request by clicking here. This application uses the following dataset(s):Cleveland Crime Incidents Update FrequencyDaily around 8AM EST ContactsCity of Cleveland Division of Police InstructionsBy default, the map loads with the previous 90 days incidents.Use the filters on the left side of the page to filter the data by date, City of Cleveland Ward, Cleveland Division of Police District, and/or crime type.Use the “Reset Filters” buttons under each filter to reset each filter individually.Use the ”Query" button in the lower right to select points currently on the map by drawing shapes and defining specific locations.Use the “Map Layers” button in the lower right to turn on and off the crime incidents layer, the Cleveland Division of Police Districts, and/or the City of Cleveland Wards.Use the “Tables” to view the data tables for the incidents that are map or queried.Click a point on the map to pop up individual information about the point(s) that were selected.Data from the map can be exported to CSV, JSON, and GeoJSON files directly from the tables which are accessed through the “Tables” button in the lower right corner of the map.
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⚠️Due to the City's transition to a new Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) system, the Fire Calls for Service data, dashboards and maps on this site currently include records only through 8/11/25. Regular updates are paused to align and unify old and new data models, but we aim to restore fully automated daily updates by the end of 2025.This transition does not impact Public Safety systems or operations. Data for the pause period (from 8/11/25 until integration completion) is still available upon request via the City’s public records portal. Thank you for your patience!Data from City of Cleveland Public Safety's Computer-aided Dispatch (CAD) system on calls for Cleveland Division of Fire service. Includes information on call time, priority, type, and location.Data starts with calls from 2021 onwards. The data provided is the latest available information and is updated regularly as statistics change.Disposition Type refers to the first disposition code, which is the code determined by Division of Fire after arrival on scene.Map points show approximate locations of Fire calls for service, including 911 calls. Locations are adjusted to the nearest road, and full addresses are not provided to protect individual privacy. Update FrequencyDaily around 8:30AM Eastern Related data item(s):Fire Calls for Service DatasetFire Calls for Service Dashboard ContactsCity of Cleveland, Division of Fire InstructionsZoom into an area of the city you are interested in.Search for an address to zoom to that location.Filter by call date or call disposition type.Use the map layers tool to add wards or neighborhoods to the map.Use the advanced query tool to view calls within a certain distance of a point or area.
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Description Boundary layer of the service area for the City of Cleveland Water. The Cleveland Water service area includes all of Cuyahoga County as well as portions of Geauga, Medina, Portage, and Summit counties.
Data Glossary See the Attributes section below for details about each column in this dataset.
Update Frequency
Updated when the water service area changes.
Contact
Cleveland GIS
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TwitterTO VIEW AND DOWNLOAD THE ACTUAL DATA, CLICK ON ONE OF THE LAYERS BELOWDescriptionIn 2022, the Western Reserve Land Conservancy (WRLC) partnered with the City of Cleveland to survey every property in the city, collecting data and photos on structure condition, signs of vacancy, sidewalk condition, and more. This dataset is a refined version of the original survey results, curated by the City of Cleveland’s Office of Urban Analytics and Building & Housing. Fields were cleaned and standardized for accuracy and readability. The data is available as parcel polygons and parcel centroids. For more details, visit WRLC’s page explaining the survey process and results.Related ItemsCitywide Property Survey 2022 Interactive ViewerData GlossarySee the Attributes section in each layer below for details about each column in these datasets. All survey fields are prefixed with survey_ and include field aliases that explain the field's purpose. All other fields are part of the survey system and County property data. For more information about the Regrid fields, see their parcel schema.Update FrequencyStaticContactsCity of Cleveland, Building & HousingCity of Cleveland, Urban Analytics & Innovation
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The 15-minute city planning framework aggregates many of the city's past and current goals such as climate action, equitable land use policies, and healthy neighborhoods for all into a comprehensive and understandable strategy to provide quality neighborhoods for Clevelanders."The 15-minute framework" refers to the overall concept and goal of building a 15-minute city & creating 15-minute neighborhoods, and is a general approach we can use to make decisions on land use policy, funding requests from developers and organizations, and other choices related to city action and investment."The 15-minute index" specifically refers to the data model below, and all of the constituent assumptions and data points. It is the map of our current, and perhaps our future ideal, city.This StoryMap uses the following dataset(s):15 Minute City Points of Interest
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City Planning Staff built a GIS model to help prioritize locations in the city for safety improvements based on severity of crashes and need of the surrounding community. Essentially, the model aggregated crash data points into street segments, weights the crashes by severity, and factors other context, like proximity to schools, senior housing, buses, into a final score. Both the final index score and the various aggregate crash numbers are useful for understanding safety conditions on Cleveland's streets and identifying the worst problem intersections.MethodologyBreak up Cleveland's street network in comparable segments including intersections.Aggregate crash data within those segments (sum crashes by severity type)Score the crash history for the segment (Crash_Score_Total)Identify context points of interest in vicinity (schools, senior centers, bus stops so far) of the street.Score the context for how many things are nearby that require extra proactive attention.Identify the social health and vulnerability of the street segment using CDC's Social Vulnerability Index and how it ranks within ClevelandCombine the crash score and context score.Boost scores based on social vulnerability, e.g. elevate streets in neighborhoods experiencing more poverty, racial discrimination, housing and transportation challenges.Data GlossarySee Attributes below for information about fields. Update FrequencyNever ContactsCleveland City Planning Commission
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Official City of Cleveland Parks and Recreation Centers viewing application. This app contains information on the following:Recreation CentersOutdoor Recreation AmenitiesCity ParksCity Park AmenitiesMultiuse TrailsCleveland MetroparksClick here to use or download the underlying data for this application. Instructions Click on any feature to learn more about it.Use the icons on the upper left hand corner to do the following:Present a legend of viewable features.Toggle layers.Search for a specific feature.Get directions to a location on the map. Update Frequency⚠️This dataset is not currently being updated. Maintenance is temporarily paused until City staff are onboarded in Fall 2025. (Update as of 8/28/25) This application uses the following dataset(s):Cleveland Parks and Recreation System ContactsJay Rauschenbach, Parks & Recreation Planning Manager, jrauschenbach@clevelandohio.gov