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TwitterThis data comes from the NYC Department of Finance, the US EPA's Portfolio Manager, and grading metric based on Local Law 95 of 2019.
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TwitterA list of complaints received and associated data. Prior monthly reports are archived at DOB and are not available on NYC Open Data.
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TwitterNet change in housing units arising from new buildings, demolitions, or alterations for NYC Census Blocks since 2010. The NYC Department of City Planning's (DCP) Housing Database provide the 2010 census count of housing units, the net change in Class A housing units since the census, and the count of units pending completion for commonly used political and statistical boundaries. These tables are aggregated from the DCP Housing Database, which is derived from Department of Buildings (DOB)-approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. Net housing unit change is calculated as the sum of all three construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions, and can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space. All previously released versions of this data are available on the DCP Website: BYTES of the BIG APPLE. Current version: 25q2
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TwitterThe City of Chicago launched the Micro-Market Recovery Program (MMRP), a coordinated effort among the City, not-for-profit intermediaries, and non-profit and for-profit capital sources to improve conditions, strengthen property values, and create environments supportive of private investment in targeted markets throughout the city. The goal of MMRP is to improve conditions, strengthen property values, and create environments supportive of private investment in targeted areas by strategically deploying public and private capital and other tools and resources in well-defined micro-markets. This MMRP Case dataset contains all Department of Buildings (DOB) Cases that have occured at properties falling within any MMRP Zone. Permits, Cases and Violations can be linked to the MMRP Geographies dataset using ADDRKEY or ADDRGRPKEY. To link Violations and Inspections to their Permits and Cases use Violation PERMITORCASEKEY to link to Permits APKEY_PERMIT and Cases APKEY_CASE. For more information on the MMRP program, please see http://www.regionalhopi.org/content/city-chicago-micro-market-recovery-program-overview.
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TwitterThis list contains information on maps maintained by the topographical bureau
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TwitterThe dataset contains locations and attributes of building construction and alteration permits applied for and approved by the District of Columbia Department of Buildings. These data are shared via an automated process where addresses are batch matched (geocoded) to the District's Master Address Repository. Users may find that some data points will contain 0,0 for X,Y coordinates resulting in inconsistent spatial locations. Addresses for these data points could not be automatically geocoded and will need to be manually geocoded to 'best fit' locations in DC.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The Condo Relate table contains attributes of air rights, record, and tax lots approved for active condos. Condominium documentation (Condo Book & Page) is approved and recorded by the DC's Surveyors Office (OS) for the DC's Department of Buildings (DOB) . Real Property Tax Administration's (RPTA) Maps & Title division receives copies of the approved Condominium documents from OS and reviews, records, and then ties the Condo book & page information to the Lot(s) of interest, i.e., (Air Rights, Record, Tax, or a combination) for the Office of Tax and Revenue (OTR).
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TwitterThe Building Elevation and Subgrade data contains New York City building centroids derived from the Department of Building's (DOB) February 26th, 2022 building footprint dataset. Each record contains a grade and first floor measurement for each building (recorded as feet above sea-level in the NADV88 vertical datum) and indicates if subgrade space exists. DCP contracted with an external data vendor to generate a single point, or centroid, that represented the location of the center of every building recorded in the DOB dataset. The dataset excluded the footprints of small accessory buildings such as sheds. Each row within the dataset represents one building centroid, and records the X and Y coordinates of that centroid in the NAD 1983 coordinate system.
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TwitterThe dataset contains locations and attributes of retired address points, created as part of the Master Address Repository (MAR) for the Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and Department of Buildings (DOB). There are over 40,000 retired addresses. These once existed, but no longer do. More information on the MAR can be found at https://opendata.dc.gov/pages/addressing-in-dc. The data dictionary is available: https://opendata.dc.gov/documents/2a4b3d59aade43188b6d18e3811f4fd3/explore. In the MAR 2, the AddressPt is called ADDRESSES_PT and its features additional useful information such as placement _location, created date, last edited date, begin date and more.
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TwitterAuthors: Jessika R. McFarland, Jonathan D. Coop, Jared A. Balik, Kyle C. Rodman, Sean A. Parks, and Camille S. Stevens-Rumann
Dryad DOI: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.9kd51c5sr
This folder includes the results, statistical models, raster data, and code used to produce our manuscript on extreme fire spread events and their burn severity outcomes on fires in the southwestern US. Descriptions of each facet of archived data are below.
Spatial data overview: We used a suite of publicly available, remotely sensed data products to do our analysis. Methods are documented in detail in McFarland et al. (2025)
1. Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS):
MTBS data were utilized to select large (>404 ha) fire perimeters within our study area using the Burned Area Boundaries Dataset.
These data can be found at: https://www...
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TwitterThe NYC Department of City Planning’s (DCP) Housing Database Aggregate Tables provide the 2010 census count of housing units, the net change in Class A housing units since the census, and the count of units pending completion for commonly used political and statistical boundaries. These tables are aggregated from the DCP Housing Database, which is derived from Department of Buildings (DOB)-approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. Net housing unit change is calculated as the sum of all three construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions, and can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space.
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TwitterData are updated semiannually, at the end of the second and fourth quarters of each year.
Please see DCP’s annual Housing Production Snapshot summarizing findings from the 21Q4 data release here. Additional Housing and Economic analyses are also available.
The NYC Department of City Planning’s (DCP) Housing Database Unit Change Summary Files provide the net change in Class A housing units since 2010, and the count of units pending completion for commonly used political and statistical boundaries (Census Block, Census Tract, City Council district, Community District, Community District Tabulation Area (CDTA), Neighborhood Tabulation Area (NTA). These tables are aggregated from the DCP Housing Database Project-Level Files, which is derived from Department of Buildings (DOB) approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. Net housing unit change is calculated as the sum of all three construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions. These files can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space.
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TwitterThe Global Mangrove Watch (GMW) was initiated as part of the JAXA Kyoto & Carbon Initiative in 2011. It is led by Aberystwyth University and solo Earth Observation, in collaboration with Wetlands International, the International Water Management Institute and the UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre (U.K.). The African part is supported by DOB Ecology through the Mangrove Capital Africa project. The GMW aims to provide geospatial information about mangrove extent and changes to the Ramsar Convention, national wetland practitioners, decision makers and NGOs. It is part of the Ramsar Science and Technical Review Panel (STRP) work plan for 2016-2018 and a Pilot Project to the Ramsar Global Wetlands Observation System (GWOS), which is implemented under the GEO-Wetlands Initiative. The primary objective of the GMW has been to provide countries lacking a national mangrove monitoring system with first cut mangrove extent and change maps, to help safeguard against further mangrove forest loss and degradation.
The GMW has generated a global baseline map of mangroves for 2010 using ALOS PALSAR and Landsat (optical) data, and changes from this baseline for epochs between 1996 and 2020 derived from JERS-1 SAR, ALOS PALSAR and ALOS-2 PALSAR-2. Annual maps are planned from 2018 and onwards.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The dataset contains locations and attributes of address points, created as part of the Master Address Repository (MAR) for the Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO) and Department of Buildings (DOB). It contains the addresses in the District of Columbia which are typically placed on the buildings. Visit opendata.dc.gov/pages/addressing-in-dc#documentation for more information on the MAR.
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TwitterThe NYC Department of City Planning’s (DCP) Housing Database Aggregate Tables provide the net change in Class A housing units since the 2010 and the count of units pending completion for commonly used political and statistical boundaries. These tables are aggregated from the DCP Housing Database, which is derived from Department of Buildings (DOB)-approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. Net housing unit change is calculated as the sum of all three construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions, and can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space.
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TwitterThis data comes from the NYC Department of Finance, the US EPA's Portfolio Manager, and grading metric based on Local Law 95 of 2019.