19 datasets found
  1. a

    04.1 Introduction to Editing Parcels using ArcGIS Desktop 10

    • training-iowadot.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 18, 2017
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    Iowa Department of Transportation (2017). 04.1 Introduction to Editing Parcels using ArcGIS Desktop 10 [Dataset]. https://training-iowadot.opendata.arcgis.com/documents/375b556308114d919e9b582078db4d46
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 18, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Iowa Department of Transportation
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Parcel editing involves working with land parcel boundaries and land records information. Other data, such as utility features, may also be related to your land records. When editing parcels, you are working with point, line, and polygon features. These features represent the coordinates of the parcel (points), the parcel boundary (lines), and the parcel feature (polygon).The location of many utilities such as roads, water, and electrical networks are often dependent on the parcel boundary. If parcel boundaries are updated, dependent utilities should also be updated.The parcel editing environment in ArcGIS Desktop 10 provides an intelligent editing environment that is designed specifically for working with land parcels and their related survey information.After completing this course, you will be able to:Define a parcel fabric.Describe the benefits of using a parcel fabric.Apply the steps of the parcel editing workflow.Use a parcel fabric to manage land records data.Create new parcels using the Parcel Editor.

  2. c

    Parcels Public

    • gisdata.countyofnapa.org
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 15, 2023
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    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2023). Parcels Public [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/parcels-public-1
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 15, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Internal view of the parcel layer. This view contains all the attributes that can be seen by County employees.There are approximately 51,300 real property parcels in Napa County. Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. GIS parcel boundaries are maintained by the Information Technology Services GIS team. Assessor Parcel Maps are created and maintained by the Assessor Division Mapping Section. Each parcel has an Assessor Parcel Number (APN) that is its unique identifier. The APN is the link to various Napa County databases containing information such as owner name, situs address, property value, land use, zoning, flood data, and other related information. Data for this map service is sourced from the Napa County Parcels dataset which is updated nightly with any recent changes made by the mapping team. There may at times be a delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel boundary configuration and corresponding information is available in the online GIS parcel viewer.From 1850 to early 1900s assessor staff wrote the name of the property owner and the property value on map pages. They began using larger maps, called “tank maps” because of the large steel cabinet they were kept in, organized by school district (before unification) on which names and values were written. In the 1920s, the assessor kept large books of maps by road district on which names were written. In the 1950s, most county assessors contracted with the State Board of Equalization for board staff to draw standardized 11x17 inch maps following the provisions of Assessor Handbook 215. Maps were originally drawn on linen. By the 1980’s Assessor maps were being drawn on mylar rather than linen. In the early 1990s Napa County transitioned from drawing on mylar to creating maps in AutoCAD. When GIS arrived in Napa County in the mid-1990s, the AutoCAD images were copied over into the GIS parcel layer. Sidwell, an independent consultant, was then contracted by the Assessor’s Office to convert these APN files into the current seamless ArcGIS parcel fabric for the entire County. Beginning with the 2024-2025 assessment roll, the maps are being drawn directly in the parcel fabric layer.Parcels in the GIS parcel fabric are drawn according to the legal description using coordinate geometry (COGO) drawing tools and various reference data such as Public Lands Survey section boundaries and road centerlines. The legal descriptions are not defined by the GIS parcel fabric. Any changes made in the GIS parcel fabric via official records, filed maps, and other source documents are uploaded overnight. There is always at least a 6-month delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel configuration and corresponding information is available in the online parcel viewer for search or download.Parcel boundary accuracy can vary significantly, with errors ranging from a few feet to several hundred feet. These distortions are caused by several factors such as: the map projection - the error derived when a spherical coordinate system model is projected into a planar coordinate system using the local projected coordinate system; and the ground to grid conversion - the distortion between ground survey measurements and the virtual grid measurements. The aim of the parcel fabric is to construct a visual interpretation that is adequate for basic geographic understanding. This digital data is intended for illustration and demonstration purposes only and is not considered a legal resource, nor legally authoritative.SFAP & CFAP DISCLAIMER: Per the California Code, RTC 606. some legal parcels may have been combined for assessment purposes (CFAP) or separated for assessment purposes (SFAP) into multiple parcels for a variety of tax assessment reasons. SFAP and CFAP parcels are assigned their own APN number and primarily result from a parcel being split by a tax rate area boundary, due to a recorded land use lease, or by request of the property owner. Assessor parcel (APN) maps reflect when parcels have been separated or combined for assessment purposes, and are one legal entity. The goal of the GIS parcel fabric data is to distinguish the SFAP and CFAP parcel configurations from the legal configurations, to convey the legal parcel configurations. This workflow is in progress. Please be advised that while we endeavor to restore SFAP and CFAP parcels back to their legal configurations in the primary parcel fabric layer, SFAP and CFAP parcels may be distributed throughout the dataset. Parcels that have been restored to their legal configurations, do not reflect the SFAP or CFAP parcel configurations that correspond to the current property tax delineations. We intend for parcel reports and parcel data to capture when a parcel has been separated or combined for assessment purposes, however in some cases, information may not be available in GIS for the SFAP/CFAP status of a parcel configuration shown. For help or questions regarding a parcel’s SFAP/CFAP status, or property survey data, please visit Napa County’s Surveying Services or Property Mapping Information. For more information you can visit our website: When a Parcel is Not a Parcel | Napa County, CA

  3. g

    Parcel Fabric

    • opendata.grandforks.ca
    Updated Aug 31, 2023
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    mycity_admin (2023). Parcel Fabric [Dataset]. https://opendata.grandforks.ca/datasets/5cde70d4ffbe4fc39de20ac90e2a0aae
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 31, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    mycity_admin
    Area covered
    Description

    Downloaded from ICI Society and updated by Rosemary Dykhuizen on May 3, 2024.The ParcelMap BC (PMBC) parcel fabric contains all active titled parcels and surveyed provincial Crown land parcels in BC. For building strata parcels, there is a record, with PID value, for each parcel within the strata parcel; the geometry for those records is the geometry for the overall strata. This dataset is polygonal and contains all parcel attributes.

  4. a

    04.2 Managing Parcel Data Using ArcGIS Desktop 10

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • training-iowadot.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 18, 2017
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    Iowa Department of Transportation (2017). 04.2 Managing Parcel Data Using ArcGIS Desktop 10 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/documents/IowaDOT::04-2-managing-parcel-data-using-arcgis-desktop-10/about
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 18, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Iowa Department of Transportation
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Parcel editing involves working with land parcel boundaries and land records information. Creating new parcels and updating parcels are common editing tasks. Updates to your land records data should reflect the real world and, at the same time, maintain a record of historic boundaries and associated information.In this course, you will learn how to use the Parcel Editor tools to update the spatial and attribute information for existing parcels while ensuring the topological integrity of the parcel fabric. You will also learn how to import parcel lines and CAD data to create new parcels and construct multipart parcels to accurately represent real-world parcel features.The parcel editing environment in ArcGIS Desktop 10 provides an intelligent editing environment that is designed specifically for working with land parcels and their related survey information.After completing this course, you will be able to:Update parcel geometry and attributes.Work with multi-part parcels.Manage parcel history.Use other data as a source for parcel lines.Create new parcels using the Parcel Editor.

  5. c

    Napa County Public Parcels

    • gisdata.countyofnapa.org
    Updated May 23, 2025
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    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2025). Napa County Public Parcels [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/napa-county-public-parcels
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    Dataset updated
    May 23, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. Parcel boundaries in GIS are created and maintained by the Assessor’s Division Mapping section and Information Technology Services. There are approximately 51,300 real property parcels in Napa County. Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. GIS parcel boundaries are maintained by the Information Technology Services GIS team. Assessor Parcel Maps are created and maintained by the Assessor Division Mapping Section. Each parcel has an Assessor Parcel Number (APN) that is its unique identifier. The APN is the link to various Napa County databases containing information such as owner name, situs address, property value, land use, zoning, flood data, and other related information. Data for this map service is sourced from the Napa County Parcels dataset which is updated nightly with any recent changes made by the mapping team. There may at times be a delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel boundary configuration and corresponding information is available in the online GIS parcel viewer.From 1850 to early 1900s assessor staff wrote the name of the property owner and the property value on map pages. They began using larger maps, called “tank maps” because of the large steel cabinet they were kept in, organized by school district (before unification) on which names and values were written. In the 1920s, the assessor kept large books of maps by road district on which names were written. In the 1950s, most county assessors contracted with the State Board of Equalization for board staff to draw standardized 11x17 inch maps following the provisions of Assessor Handbook 215. Maps were originally drawn on linen. By the 1980’s Assessor maps were being drawn on mylar rather than linen. In the early 1990s Napa County transitioned from drawing on mylar to creating maps in AutoCAD. When GIS arrived in Napa County in the mid-1990s, the AutoCAD images were copied over into the GIS parcel layer. Sidwell, an independent consultant, was then contracted by the Assessor’s Office to convert these APN files into the current seamless ArcGIS parcel fabric for the entire County. Beginning with the 2024-2025 assessment roll, the maps are being drawn directly in the parcel fabric layer.Parcels in the GIS parcel fabric are drawn according to the legal description using coordinate geometry (COGO) drawing tools and various reference data such as Public Lands Survey section boundaries and road centerlines. The legal descriptions are not defined by the GIS parcel fabric. Any changes made in the GIS parcel fabric via official records, filed maps, and other source documents are uploaded overnight. There is always at least a 6-month delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel configuration and corresponding information is available in the online parcel viewer for search or download.Parcel boundary accuracy can vary significantly, with errors ranging from a few feet to several hundred feet. These distortions are caused by several factors such as: the map projection - the error derived when a spherical coordinate system model is projected into a planar coordinate system using the local projected coordinate system; and the ground to grid conversion - the distortion between ground survey measurements and the virtual grid measurements. The aim of the parcel fabric is to construct a visual interpretation that is adequate for basic geographic understanding. This digital data is intended for illustration and demonstration purposes only and is not considered a legal resource, nor legally authoritative.SFAP & CFAP DISCLAIMER: Per the California Code, RTC 606. some legal parcels may have been combined for assessment purposes (CFAP) or separated for assessment purposes (SFAP) into multiple parcels for a variety of tax assessment reasons. SFAP and CFAP parcels are assigned their own APN number and primarily result from a parcel being split by a tax rate area boundary, due to a recorded land use lease, or by request of the property owner. Assessor parcel (APN) maps reflect when parcels have been separated or combined for assessment purposes, and are one legal entity. The goal of the GIS parcel fabric data is to distinguish the SFAP and CFAP parcel configurations from the legal configurations, to convey the legal parcel configurations. This workflow is in progress. Please be advised that while we endeavor to restore SFAP and CFAP parcels back to their legal configurations in the primary parcel fabric layer, SFAP and CFAP parcels may be distributed throughout the dataset. Parcels that have been restored to their legal configurations, do not reflect the SFAP or CFAP parcel configurations that correspond to the current property tax delineations. We intend for parcel reports and parcel data to capture when a parcel has been separated or combined for assessment purposes, however in some cases, information may not be available in GIS for the SFAP/CFAP status of a parcel configuration shown. For help or questions regarding a parcel’s SFAP/CFAP status, or property survey data, please visit Napa County’s Surveying Services or Property Mapping Information. For more information you can visit our website: When a Parcel is Not a Parcel | Napa County, CA

    Data last synced 08-29-2025 04:24. Data synced on a Weekly interval.

  6. u

    ParcelMap BC Parcel Polygons - Fully Attributed - Catalogue - Canadian Urban...

    • beta.data.urbandatacentre.ca
    Updated Aug 5, 2025
    + more versions
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    (2025). ParcelMap BC Parcel Polygons - Fully Attributed - Catalogue - Canadian Urban Data Catalogue (CUDC) [Dataset]. https://beta.data.urbandatacentre.ca/dataset/bc-data-catalogue-parcelmap-bc-parcel-polygons-fully-attributed
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 5, 2025
    Area covered
    Canada, British Columbia
    Description

    ParcelMap BC is the current, complete and trusted mapped representation of titled and Crown land parcels across British Columbia, considered to be the point of truth for the graphical representation of property boundaries. It is not the authoritative source for the legal property boundary or related records attributes; this will always be the plan of survey or the related registry information. This particular dataset is a subset of the complete ParcelMap BC data and is comprised of the parcel fabric and attributes for over two million parcels published under Crown Copyright. For a version published under the Open Government Licence - British Columbia, please see https://catalogue.data.gov.bc.ca/dataset/2f4117d9-41fc-44db-87d4-dbdb77f14086. This dataset does NOT include parcel representations (i.e. distinct polygons with unique PID identifiers) for Building Strata Parcels - Building Strata parcels are represented by a single polygon uniquely identified by the Strata Plan Number (i.e. individual strata lot PIDs are not included). For a dataset which includes unique polygon features (stacked geometries) for each Building Strata parcel, please use the ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric or ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric - Fully Attributed dataset or refer to the ParcelMap BC Shared Geometry Cross Reference Table, which includes the strata lot (PID) to strata plan relationship. Notes: Parcel title information is sourced from the BC Land Title Register. Title questions should be directed to a local Land Title Office. The ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric is expected to eventually replace the Integrated Cadastral Fabric.

  7. G

    ParcelMap BC Parcel Polygons

    • open.canada.ca
    • catalogue.arctic-sdi.org
    fgdb/gdb, html, kml +1
    Updated Aug 14, 2025
    + more versions
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    Government of British Columbia (2025). ParcelMap BC Parcel Polygons [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/dataset/2f4117d9-41fc-44db-87d4-dbdb77f14086
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    html, kml, wms, fgdb/gdbAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 14, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Government of British Columbiahttps://www2.gov.bc.ca/
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    British Columbia
    Description

    ParcelMap BC is the current, complete and trusted mapped representation of titled and Crown land parcels across British Columbia, considered to be the point of truth for the graphical representation of property boundaries. It is not the authoritative source for the legal property boundary or related records attributes; this will always be the plan of survey or the related registry information. This particular dataset is a subset of the complete ParcelMap BC data and is comprised of the parcel polygons and attributes for over two million parcels published under the Open Government Licence - British Columbia. This dataset does NOT include parcel representations (i.e. distinct polygons with unique PID identifiers) for Building Strata Parcels - Building Strata parcels are represented by a single polygon uniquely identified by the Strata Plan Number (i.e. individual strata lot PIDs are not included). For a dataset which includes unique polygon features (stacked geometries) for each Building Strata parcel, please use the ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric or ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric - Fully Attributed dataset or refer to the ParcelMap BC Shared Geometry Cross Reference Table, which includes the strata lot (PID) to strata plan relationship. Notes: 1. Parcel title information is sourced from the BC Land Title Register. Title questions should be directed to a local Land Title Office. 2. The ParcelMap BC Parcel Fabric is expected to eventually replace the Integrated Cadastral Fabric.

  8. a

    Parcels

    • opendata-yorkcosc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 2, 2021
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    York County, SC - GIS Online (2021). Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-yorkcosc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/parcels
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 2, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    York County, SC - GIS Online
    Area covered
    Description

    This data represents the graphic portrayal of land parcels and their spatial relationships throughout York County, South Carolina. Land parcel boundaries are also the basis for and define coincident boundaries for other layers, such as zoning, subdivisions, public safety response (ORI -Police, Fire, EMS) and Jurisdiction.Boundaries are established from a variety of sources including cadastral plats, subdivision plats, deeds, land contracts, right-of-way plats, and others. Each feature represents a parcel of land that is inventoried by a unique identifier, referred to as a “Tax Map Id” number. This dataset also includes multi-unit structures which have separate tax accounts for each unit, such as condominium units, represented as stacked polygon features. The parent parcel number [ParentTaxID] for the land parcel is distinguished from the child parcel [TaxMapID] for the condo unit. This data does not include mobile home data. Attributes include data stored within the Esri Fabric data model combined with those from the CAMA data. Examples of relevant attributes include:the [TaxMapID], [ParcelID] and [AprAccNum] can be used to uniquely identify each parcel. the [MailAddr1], [MailAddr2], [MailApt], [MailCity], [MailState], [MailZip] can be used as the full tax billing address for the owner.The [Owner1], [Owner2], [Owner3] describe the owner.the [YearBuilt] offers the oldest year a building was built on the property, reference this web map for info on potential lead pipes on premises;the area of the parcel in acres [GISSizeAC] as calculated from the parcel geometry and also the [deededAcres] from recorded documents, and ;the date that the parcel boundary was last edited [DATE_MODIFIED].How were parcels compiled? This layer was initially developed as an ink-on-mylar property maps maintained by the County from the early 1970's through around 2001.In the 1990s, the county procured services to convert parcels from source documents, however the product delivered in 2000 used a methodology which lost fidelity of source documents. Since then, county staff adhered to this same methodology in their daily work. Between 2001 and 2015 staff used an Esri topology to maintain parcel data in ArcMap. In 2015 the county migrated to Parcel Fabric (ArcMap) and then in 2021 to Pro (2.6/10.8.1 Enterprise) Parcel Fabric. In May of 2021 the county began outsourcing maintenance of parcel edits. This has worked well and was initiated in part to ensure a higher standard of editing practice was adhered to, but also to fulfil a shortage of skilled staff in the job market. County parcel mapping staff remain responsible for simple transactions (merge, split), compilation of materials to create vendor edit request task, and QC or review of vendor work. In Q4 2021, County Staff performed a needs assessment to review alignment issues between parcels and other layers and the internal business requirements for data alignment to parcels. They determined boundary layers must remain coincident with parcels, which are used in decision making by citizens and across many areas of government. Also, it was determined that our parcels had many errors from 20 years of edits in a non-Fabric data model and the previous editing practices. The county will be remapping parcels using ARP grant funding in the 2023-2024 timeframe. Upon delivery in 2024, data maintenance practices will ensure ongoing alignment with parcels.Year BuiltTo obtain the year built for structures on a property, use the 'Buildings' table available through our open data portal.Once you have downloaded the 'Buildings' table and this parcels layer, consider processing the building records in some way to join or perform a relate as there could be many buildings on one parcel, using the following fields:Parcel.AprAccNum = BuildingTable.PropertyID(Note: 98,227 parcels have 1 building, 647 parcels have 2 buildings, 272 have 3 or more)Data SchemaReview the Parcel schema document (PDF) to gain a better understand of the data fields. Access the file geodatabase source data in SC State Plane coordinate system

  9. a

    Litchfield Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Litchfield Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/litchfield-parcels
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  10. d

    NSW Land Parcel Property Theme

    • data.gov.au
    esri mapserver
    Updated Sep 28, 2021
    + more versions
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    Spatial Services (DFSI) (2021). NSW Land Parcel Property Theme [Dataset]. https://data.gov.au/dataset/ds-nsw-7f2cd950-1f93-4058-9c20-6bfc1f1e0caf
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    esri mapserverAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 28, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Spatial Services (DFSI)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    New South Wales
    Description

    Access APINSW Land Parcel and Property Theme Please Note WGS 84 = GDA94 serviceThis dataset has a spatial reference of [WGS 84 = GDA94] and can NOT be easily consumed into GDA2020 environments. A similar service with a ‘multiCRS’ suffix is available which can support GDA2020, GDA94 and WGS84 = GDA2020 environments. In due course, and allowing time for user feedback and testing, it is intended that these original services will adopt the new multiCRS functionally. NSW Land Parcel Property Theme is …Show full description Access APINSW Land Parcel and Property Theme Please Note WGS 84 = GDA94 serviceThis dataset has a spatial reference of [WGS 84 = GDA94] and can NOT be easily consumed into GDA2020 environments. A similar service with a ‘multiCRS’ suffix is available which can support GDA2020, GDA94 and WGS84 = GDA2020 environments. In due course, and allowing time for user feedback and testing, it is intended that these original services will adopt the new multiCRS functionally. NSW Land Parcel Property Theme is a polygon dataset that represents areas of land with defined boundaries, under unique ownership for specific property rights or interests.A land parcel is an area of land with defined boundaries, under unique ownership for specific property rights or interests.A property is something that is capable of being owned, in the form of real property (land). The interest can involve physical aspects, such as the use of land, or conceptual rights, such as a right to use the land in the future.The NSW cadastre is an up to date parcel-based land information system which contains a unique identifier which can be linked of interests in land (i.e. rights, restrictions and responsibilities). The cadastre includes a geometric definition of land parcels linked to other records, such as land titles, describing the nature of the interests, the ownership or control of those interests, and often the value of the parcel and its improvements.A cadastral product or service visualises the boundaries of land parcels, often buildings on land, the parcel identifier, and basic topographic features.The land parcel and property theme provides the foundation fabric of land ownership. It consists of the digital cadastral database and associated parcel and property informationDatasets that make up the Land Parcel and Property Theme include:Cadastral Fabric · Lot: Depicts a parcel of land created on a survey plan. Each lot may be represented by standard lots, standard part lots, strata or stratum. Each lot has a lot number, section number, plan lot area, plan number, plan label, ITS title status, and stratum label.· Road: Represents dedicated public roads which are open ways for the passage of vehicles, persons or animals on land. The road dataset includes public roads in use. Each road type has a section number, plan number, plan label, ITS title status, road type, road width or Crown/Council width, lot number, and stratum label. · Unidentified: Represents a parcel of land that cannot be identified. Crown land, vested, dedicated and severed land may be included in this category as well as Old System lots for which lot/DP identification cannot be found. This dataset also identifies the locations of 100ft wide reserves, ACT regions, closed roads, crossings, surveyed areas, and un-surveyed areas.· Water feature: Represents tidal, non-tidal and ocean waters which form a cadastral boundary.Cadastral Features · Easement (including Carrigeway): Depicts a right, attached to land (the dominant tenement), to use other land (the servient tenement) for a specified non-exclusive purpose known to the law, e.g. right of carriageway, easement to drain water etc. – however the law also recognises an easement in favour of a statutory authority without a dominant tenement, described as an ‘easement in gross’.· Road Corridor: Represents the spatial extent of the legal road network· Road Centreline: Represents a line that forms the centreline of cadastral road corridors.· Railway Corridor: Represents a part of the Land Parcel and Property Theme covering railway land that is not defined by a lot.· Water feature Corridor: Represents the extent of a water feature or the delineation between water features of a different type or status. The dataset contains high water mark, low water mark, the limit of tidal influence and bay closing lines.· Watermark: Represents the spatial extent of tidal, non-tidal and ocean waters which form a cadastral boundary.· Authority Reference: Depicts the changes to an area definition that has occurred through a gazettal, act or government file action.PropertyProperty data is a polygon feature class that spatially represents an aspatial property description as provided by Property NSW in their Valnet database.Properties are divided into three categories:· Property (complete)· Incomplete· OtherLand and property data underpins the economic, social and fabric environmental of Australia and is used, amongst other things, to:· secure tenure for access to capital· define allowable use of land· manage native title, nature conservation, heritage protection, defence, and disaster management· improve infrastructure and property development planning· water and carbon accounting programs.The Spatial Services digital cadastral data maintenance program captures all changes to the statewide cadastral fabric from new survey plans and a variety of other sources.The cadastral data upgrade program is improving the spatial accuracy of the cadastral fabric by using survey dimensions and improved survey control. Upgrades are carried out together with the relevant Local Government Authority and are further facilitated through the incorporation of data provided by Local Government Authorities, Hunter Water and Sydney Water.Upgrade positional accuracy varies across the state and generally ranges from less than 5m from true position in rural areas to less than 0.2m from true position in urban areas, dependent on the survey control available.Data quality in both Cadastral Maintenance and Cadastral Upgrade is assured through specification compliance and datatopology rules.Spatial Services is currently undertaking a cadastral supply chain digital transformation initiative thorough the Cadastre NSW Program.Spatial Services continuously updates this theme with information sourced from relevant stakeholders and custodians. The majority of updates to the datasets in this theme originate from subdivision, registration and gazettal activity.Spatial Services works with Local and State Government to upgrade the accuracy of Spatial Services Defined Administrative Data Sets.MetadataType Esri Map Service Update Frequency As required Contact Details Contact us via the Spatial Services Customer Hub Relationship to Themes and Datasets Land Parcel and Property Theme of the Foundation Spatial Data Framework (FSDF) Accuracy The dataset maintains a positional relationship to, and alignment with, the Lot and Property digital datasets. This dataset was captured by digitising the best available cadastral mapping at a variety of scales and accuracies, ranging from 1:500 to 1:250 000 according to the National Mapping Council of Australia, Standards of Map Accuracy (1975). Therefore, the position of the feature instance will be within 0.5mm at map scale for 90% of the well-defined points. That is, 1:500 = 0.25m, 1:2000 = 1m, 1:4000 = 2m, 1:25000 = 12.5m, 1:50000 = 25m and 1:100000 = 50m. A program of positional upgrade (accuracy improvement) is currently underway. Spatial Reference System (dataset) Geocentric Datum of Australia 1994 (GDA94), Australian Height Datum (AHD) Spatial Reference System    (web service) EPSG 4326: WGS84 Geographic 2D WGS84 Equivalent To GDA94 Spatial Extent Full state Standards and Specifications Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) implemented and compatible for consumption by common GIS platforms. Available as either cache or non-cache, depending on client use or requirement. Distributors Service Delivery, DCS Spatial Services 346 Panorama Ave Bathurst NSW 2795Dataset Producers and Contributors Cadastral Spatial Programs, DCS Spatial Services 346 Panorama Ave Bathurst NSW 2795

  11. a

    Hudson Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Hudson Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/NashuaRPC::nrpc-open-data-hudson?layer=2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  12. l

    Parcels

    • opendata.london.ca
    • open-london.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 30, 2021
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    opendata_London (2021). Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata.london.ca/datasets/1b14d93461b34591b5bd32a881763dbe
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 30, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    opendata_London
    Area covered
    Description

    This dataset is a general representation of parcel mapping used by the City of London. The mapping is derived from assessment and ownership data but is not sanctioned by either MPAC or Teranet. The geospatial accuracy is not to be relied upon and must not be used for building permit applcaitions, engineering designs, detailed planning, development or property use. Use at own risk.

  13. a

    Data from: Hollis Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Hollis Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/NashuaRPC::nrpc-open-data-hollis?layer=2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  14. a

    Wilton Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Wilton Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/wilton-parcels
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  15. a

    Lyndeborough Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Lyndeborough Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/lyndeborough-parcels/explore
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  16. a

    Merrimack Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Merrimack Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/maps/NashuaRPC::merrimack-parcels
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  17. a

    Nashua Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Nashua Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/nashua-parcels
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  18. a

    Mont Vernon Parcels

    • opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 29, 2023
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    Nashua Regional Planning Commission (2023). Mont Vernon Parcels [Dataset]. https://opendata-nashuarpc.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/mont-vernon-parcels
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 29, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Nashua Regional Planning Commission
    Area covered
    Description
    The NPRC parcel datalayer contains property (land lot) boundaries and select attributes about each property. NRPC compiled this information over many years from various sources including original tax maps that were subsequently georeferenced and digitized by the Commission. As such, the data is suitable for tax assessment purposes but is not survey-quality.

    The datalayer contains discrete, non-overlapping polygons. Non-contiguous lot areas are modelled as multi-part polygons. Public rights-of-way and water bodies are stored as non-numbered lots to void the creation of null voids in the parcel fabric. Parcels are edge-matched along town borders. Along the MA state border parcels conform to the Towns from Survey Points datalayer available from MassGIS; in most other cases the parcels are matched to the 1:24K town border datalayer (pba) derived from USGS topo maps and available from NH Granit. In cases where GIS parcel information did not conform to the USGS town boundary linework, NRPC interpreted tax map geography and dimensions and mapped parcel boundaries accordingly.

    Over time, NRPC has maintained this database by monitoring the Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds online database for recordings related to subdivisions, lot mergers, and lot line revisions. NRPC has maintained a very high match rate between the parcel database and corresponding assessing records. The cardinality between parcels and assessing records is 1:M. In some cases, the NRPC edit may precede the corresponding update on the municipal property record card. For this reason, some parcels may not yet have a matching assessing record, or the parcel attributes may not be exactly consistent with the assessing record.

    Disclaimer: These data are an NRPC interpretation of original source maps and are appropriate for planning purposes; they should not be utilized where legal and surveyed property boundaries are required. The most current property information is on file within each respective City or Town. Edges between towns in this dataset are not authoritative delineations of town boundaries. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, do not make any warranty, representation, or guarantee as to the content, sequence, accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any of the information provide herein. The user should not rely on the data provided herein without verifying its accuracy independently. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, explicitly disclaim any representations and warranties including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. NRPC and its member communities, respectively, shall assume no liability for any errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in the information provided regardless of how caused and for any decision made or action taken or not taken by the user in reliance upon any information or data furnished hereunder.
  19. a

    Right of Way Line

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • opendata.miamidade.gov
    Updated Oct 21, 2024
    + more versions
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    Miami-Dade County, Florida (2024). Right of Way Line [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/MDC::right-of-way-line
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 21, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Miami-Dade County, Florida
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    A line feature class of Right Of Way (ROW) lines within Miami-Dade County. This data was derived from the ROW polygon layer and is maintain in the Esri Parcel Fabric (PF) data model.Updated: Not Planned The data was created using: Projected Coordinate System: WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_SphereProjection: Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere

  20. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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Iowa Department of Transportation (2017). 04.1 Introduction to Editing Parcels using ArcGIS Desktop 10 [Dataset]. https://training-iowadot.opendata.arcgis.com/documents/375b556308114d919e9b582078db4d46

04.1 Introduction to Editing Parcels using ArcGIS Desktop 10

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Feb 18, 2017
Dataset authored and provided by
Iowa Department of Transportation
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Description

Parcel editing involves working with land parcel boundaries and land records information. Other data, such as utility features, may also be related to your land records. When editing parcels, you are working with point, line, and polygon features. These features represent the coordinates of the parcel (points), the parcel boundary (lines), and the parcel feature (polygon).The location of many utilities such as roads, water, and electrical networks are often dependent on the parcel boundary. If parcel boundaries are updated, dependent utilities should also be updated.The parcel editing environment in ArcGIS Desktop 10 provides an intelligent editing environment that is designed specifically for working with land parcels and their related survey information.After completing this course, you will be able to:Define a parcel fabric.Describe the benefits of using a parcel fabric.Apply the steps of the parcel editing workflow.Use a parcel fabric to manage land records data.Create new parcels using the Parcel Editor.

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