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This feature layer is a general representation of detachments from the City of Columbus. It is not a legal record. This feature layer is updated throughout the annexations and detachment submission and approval process. Annexations and detachments to the City of Columbus are adopted by legislation approved by City Council and take effect upon recording within the appropriate County Recorder’s Office. This feature layer is a digitized representation of the process for annexation and detachment and is mapped based upon underlying parcel geography from the three County Auditor’s (Franklin, Fairfield, and Delaware) GIS parcel feature layers in which the City of Columbus currently resides.The City of Columbus makes no guarantee as to the accuracy of this mapping. It is provided as a general reference tool. User’s are advised to consult legal annexation records available within the various County Recorder’s Offices when attempting to determine the precise boundaries for the City of Columbus. Users are advised not to use this feature layer if they are unwilling to accept the conditions stated herein.Questions regarding this feature layer should be directed to the City of Columbus, Department of Public Service, Division of Infrastructure Management’s Map Room at OneStopPlans@columbus.gov.
This layer is a component of LucityDPS.
© City of Columbus GIS
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This map layer shows street centerlines in central Ohio. Specifically, this layer covers Franklin County and a seven-mile radius beyond. This layer was created by the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission (MORPC) as part of the Location Based Response System (LBRS) initiative of the Ohio Geographically Referenced Information Program (OGRIP). This layer is cooperatively maintained by various entities in the region including MORPC, Columbus, Dublin, Worthington, Westerville, Gahanna, Grove City, Hilliard, and Franklin County.
This layer is a component of BaseMap of Columbus Area.
BaseMap of Columbus Area
© City of Columbus GIS
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License information was derived automatically
This map layer shows the location of addressable structures in central Ohio. Addresses are included for all of Franklin County and a seven-mile radius beyond. This layer was created as part of the Location Based Response System (LBRS) initiative of the Ohio Geographically Referenced Information Program (OGRIP). The included address data is maintained by a cooperative effort between regional governements including Columbus, Dublin, Worthington, Westerville, Gahanna, Grove City, Hilliard and Franklin County. Maintenace of the layer is coordinated by the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission.
This layer is a component of map311mini.
© Columbus GIS
This layer is a component of LucityRNP.
© City of Columbus GIS
North Carolina Effective Flood zones: In 2000, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) designated North Carolina a Cooperating Technical Partner State, formalizing an agreement between FEMA and the State to modernize flood maps. This partnership resulted in creation of the North Carolina Floodplain Mapping Program (NCFMP). As a CTS, the State assumed primary ownership and responsibility of the Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) for all North Carolina communities as part of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). This project includes conducting flood hazard analyses and producing updated, Digital Flood Insurance Rate Maps (DFIRMs). Floodplain management is a process that aims to achieve reduced losses due to flooding. It takes on many forms, but is realized through a series of federal, state, and local programs and regulations, in concert with industry practice, to identify flood risk, implement methods to protect man-made development from flooding, and protect the natural and beneficial functions of floodplains. FIRMs are the primary tool for state and local governments to mitigate areas of flooding. Individual county databases can be downloaded from https://fris.nc.gov Updated Jan 17th, 2025.
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This map layer shows land owned by the Columbus Land Redevelopment Office. Residential and commercial properties in both the Columbus and Franklin County Land Banks are included.
Polygon vector map data covering corporate boundaries for Columbus, Ohio containing 1 feature.
Boundary GIS (Geographic Information System) data is spatial information that delineates the geographic boundaries of specific geographic features. This data typically includes polygons representing the outlines of these features, along with attributes such as names, codes, and other relevant information.
Corporate boundaries display the incorporated areas for a city or region.
Boundary GIS data is used for a variety of purposes across multiple industries, including urban planning, environmental management, public health, transportation, and business analysis.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
This layer is a component of BaseMap of Columbus Area.
© City of Columbus GIS
https://www.nconemap.gov/pages/termshttps://www.nconemap.gov/pages/terms
NOTE: DO NOT DOWNLOAD THE IMAGERY BY USING THE MAP OR DOWNLOAD TOOLS ON THIS ARCGIS HUB ITEM PAGE. IT WILL RESULT IN A PIXELATED ORTHOIMAGE. INSTEAD, DOWNLOAD THE IMAGERY BY TILE OR BY COUNTY MOSAIC (2010 - current year).To view the latest imagery for any location in the state, customers should use the "Orthoimagery_Latest" image service which can be found at https://nconemap.gov.To view the latest imagery that is suitable for raster analysis, customers should use the "Orthoimagery_Latest_Analysis" image service which can be found at https://nconemap.gov.To find specific dates the images were captured use the imagery dates app or download the data.Metadata:Summary metadata for orthoimagery mosaicsSummary metadata for orthoimagery tilesContractor-specific metadata for Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Perquimans, and Pasquotank countiesContractor-specific metadata for Bertie, Beaufort, Greene, Hertford, Martin, and Pitt countiesContractor-specific metadata for Dare, Hyde, Tyrrell, and Washington countiesContractor-specific metadata for Carteret, Craven, Jones, Lenoir (east side), Onslow, Pamlico and Pender (east side: 115 tile) counties, plus a smaller portion of Duplin (5 tiles)Contractor-specific metadata for Brunswick, Columbus, Duplin, Jones, Lenoir, New Hanover, Pender counties
This layer represents the portions of the City of Columbus corporate boundary that overlap HUD's Low to Moderate Income Census Tracts on 6/8/2020.This is static data created using the 6/8/2020 corporate boundary and features in the HUD service (https://services.arcgis.com/VTyQ9soqVukalItT/arcgis/rest/services/Low_to_Moderate_Income_Population_by_Tract/FeatureServer)This layer was created to support the Columbus-Franklin County COVID-19 Small Business Fund Mapping tool.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This feature layer is a general representation of annexations to the City of Columbus. It is not a legal record. This feature layer is updated throughout the annexations and detachment submission and approval process. Annexations and detachments to the City of Columbus are adopted by legislation approved by City Council and take effect upon recording within the appropriate County Recorder’s Office. This feature layer is a digitized representation of the process for annexation and detachment and is mapped based upon underlying parcel geography from the three County Auditor’s (Franklin, Fairfield, and Delaware) GIS parcel feature layers in which the City of Columbus currently resides.The City of Columbus makes no guarantee as to the accuracy of this mapping. It is provided as a general reference tool. User’s are advised to consult legal annexation records available within the various County Recorder’s Offices when attempting to determine the precise boundaries for the City of Columbus. Users are advised not to use this feature layer if they are unwilling to accept the conditions stated herein.Questions regarding this feature layer should be directed to the City of Columbus, Department of Public Service, Division of Infrastructure Management’s Map Room at OneStopPlans@columbus.gov.
Part of the American Dream is owning your own home. This map shows the percentage of occupied housing that has a mortgage or loan in the U.S., by state, county, tract and block group. The data shown is from the U.S. Census Bureau's SF1 and TIGER data sets for 2010. See the map package for this data. The map is multi-scale – it switches from state, to county, to tract, to block group data as the map zooms in. The polygon data was shorelined and selected rivers and lakes were also erased from the boundaries to give a more familiar look at specific scales. At each scale, a simple popup shares a few key statistics in a paragraph, and displays a chart of housing by type of ownership.The thematic classifications are centered around the U.S. average for housing with mortgages (about 40%). The center classification is characterized as “Average.” Its break points are based on one-half standard deviation around the mean. Breakpoints for the “Low” and “High” classes are also determined from one-half standard deviation (9.7%). “Very Low” and “Very High” classes capture the remaining values.The thematic colors use colors chosen to emphasize the “high” end of the values. Darker colors are used to represent high values, while lighter colors represent low values. The “Average” class color is neutral. As you zoom into the map, a stroke is added to the polygon boundaries to delineate the county, tract and block group boundaries without allowing them to dominate the map (as is the case with black, white or other strong colors for boundaries).The light gray canvas basemap was selected for this web map to draw attention to the thematic content.
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License information was derived automatically
In the Summer of 2023, Franklin County obtained new orthoimagery covering the entire county (+/- 544 sq. mi). The aerial imagery was collected during leaf-on conditions with a 12-inch pixel resolution. Imagery was collected with the Leica ADS100 Airborne Digital Sensor. Along the perimeter of the project area, ortho-imagery is buffered at 100-feet. The orthos are delivered as a countywide dataset, consisting of 5,000' x 5,000' uncompressed 8-bit, 4-band color GeoTIFF files. The file naming convention is as follows: sxxxxyyy (Ohio South Zone); Please note that xxxx and yyy represent the easting and northing coordinates (respectively) in state plane feet. Each GeoTIFF ortho file is approximately 100 megabytes in size. Additional deliverables include countywide color and color infrared MrSID (Multi resolution Seamless Image Database) images (20x and 100x compressions), and tile index provided in ESRI shapefile format. Ownership of the data products resides with Franklin County and the state of Ohio. Orthoimagery and ancillary data products produced through this contract are public domain data.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer contains elevation contours derived from 2011 OSIP LiDAR Collection. Twenty, Ten, Five, and Two foot contour intervals are available at various mapping scales for Franklin County and the entire City of Columbus.
This map depicts age and gender data for census tracts in the City of Columbus and Franklin County Ohio. The data is part of the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 2013-2017 data set.
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CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This feature layer is a general representation of detachments from the City of Columbus. It is not a legal record. This feature layer is updated throughout the annexations and detachment submission and approval process. Annexations and detachments to the City of Columbus are adopted by legislation approved by City Council and take effect upon recording within the appropriate County Recorder’s Office. This feature layer is a digitized representation of the process for annexation and detachment and is mapped based upon underlying parcel geography from the three County Auditor’s (Franklin, Fairfield, and Delaware) GIS parcel feature layers in which the City of Columbus currently resides.The City of Columbus makes no guarantee as to the accuracy of this mapping. It is provided as a general reference tool. User’s are advised to consult legal annexation records available within the various County Recorder’s Offices when attempting to determine the precise boundaries for the City of Columbus. Users are advised not to use this feature layer if they are unwilling to accept the conditions stated herein.Questions regarding this feature layer should be directed to the City of Columbus, Department of Public Service, Division of Infrastructure Management’s Map Room at OneStopPlans@columbus.gov.