How close is your house to a fire hydrant? Use the Measure Tool to find out!Search for your address using the search bar in the upper-right corner of the page.Click on the Measure Tool, select the Distance icon, and set the units to Feet.Click on the map to begin the measurement, and double-click to finish it.
Contains water utility system features participating in the geometric network.
Geospatial data about Sacramento County, California Fire Hydrants. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
Geospatial data about Madison, Wisconsin Fire Hydrants. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer contains points representing locations for fire hydrants in the District of Columbia.
Dataset Summary About this data: The City of Rochester's award-winning water supply is primarily drawn from Canadice and Hemlock lakes; pristine Finger Lakes located approximately 28 miles south of the city and distributed along a system that includes reservoirs in the town of Rush and in the City's Highland and Cobbs Hill Parks. The City also purchases some water from the Monroe County Water Authority. This dataset includes a point for each of the 7990 hydrants in the city of Rochester and fields that describe some features about each. Data Dictionary: System Name: The system where the hydrant is located (Canadice, Domestic, Holly, Upland). Facility Identifier: The unique identifier for a given hydrant. Install Date: The date the hydrant was installed (if known). Hydrant Type: Notes if the hydrant is private or conventional. Flow Rate (GPM): Notes the hydrant’s flow rate (if known). NFPA Rating: The NFPA color code on the hydrant which indicates available flow rate. Address Number: The street number or description where the hydrant is located at. Street Name: The name of the street the hydrant is located at. Locked: Notes if the hydrant is locked (Yes/No). Location Description: More detailed instructions on where to find the hydrant. Rotation: Notes the rotation of the hydrant (if known). Manufacturer: The hydrant manufacturer. Model Year: The year the hydrant model was released. Operable: Denotes if the hydrant can be operated (Yes/No). Last Service Date: Last Service order data from the mainframe. Enabled: Unused field. Active Flag: Unused field. Status: Notes if the hydrant is currently in active. Field Book - Field Page 1: The page number in the field book where information on the hydrant is found. Field Book - Field Page 2: The page number in the field book where information on the hydrant is found. Field Book - Field Page 3: The page number in the field book where information on the hydrant is found. Owned By: The organization that owns the hydrant. Managed By: The organization that manages the hydrant. Comments 1: Location and first comment fields pushed in from mainframe. Comments 2: Location and second comment fields pushed in from mainframe. Comments 3: Location and third comment fields pushed in from mainframe. Comments 4: Location and fourth comment fields pushed in from mainframe. PilotTemp: Temporary field that notes the size, model, and year of the hydrant (if known). Field Book - Field Page Link 1: A link to where information on the hydrant is found in the field book. Field Book - Field Page Link 2: A link to where information on the hydrant is found in the field book. Field Book - Field Page Link 3: A link to where information on the hydrant is found in the field book. Comments 5: Location and fifth comment fields pushed in from mainframe. Map Status: GIS Status field (Active/Out of Service/Abandoned). Requires Inspection: Notes if the hydrant requires inspection (Yes/No). Photos and Files: Pictures and files related to the given hydrant. Source: This data comes from the Department of Environmental Services, Bureau of Water.
This dataset provides a link to Alachua County's fire hydrant locator tool. The tool can be used to determine the location of the fire hydrant or fire station closest to an input address.
This layer is sourced from Fire MDT Data Update confirmation map..
© City of Portland, Oregon
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
A polygon feature class of Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue (MDFR) Fire Hydrant Service Areas. This layer is to be used by the Fire Hydrant Maintenance Application to determine service areas for fire hydrant repairs as well as GIS data ownership. It inherits some geometry and attributes from MDC.WaterServiceArea\MDC.WaterServiceArea.Updated: As Needed The data was created using: Projected Coordinate System: WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_SphereProjection: Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere
Use this map to determine the closest available fire hydrants based on a Leander address search.
https://opendata.vancouver.ca/pages/licence/https://opendata.vancouver.ca/pages/licence/
This data set includes all in service water (fire) hydrants on the Dedicated Fire Protection, Distribution, and Transmission water subsystems. Some hydrants maybe out of commission and this is indicated on the data set. Data currencyThe extract on this website is updated weekly. Data accuracyData is accurate at the time of data extract to the best of record keeping ability.
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This data layer contains the locations of fire hydrants in Bloomington, Indiana. Hydrants owned by City of Bloomington Utilities (CBU) and privately owned hydrants are represented in this layer.
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
(Link to Metadata) Point data for emergency water supplies
This layer contains the data for the hydrant exercise boundaries for the fire department in the City of Round Rock, located in Williamson County, Texas. This layer is part of an original dataset provided and maintained by the City of Round Rock GIS/IT Department and the Planning and Development Services Department. The data in this layer are represented as polygons.A hydrant exercise boundary is an area that includes the nearest fire hydrants, and the closest fire stations. This layer can be used to determine where the closest hydrants are, and which fire station is closest to a given emergency in the area.There are 31 hydrant exercise boundaries in this layer, each containing between 94 and 205 fire hydrants. This layer used to be utilized by the fire department, but the responsibilities of fire hydrant maintenance and tracking has moved under the control of the water department, as per Kim Jones in the Planning and Development Services Department.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Location of fire hydrants on the territory of the City of Repentigny.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Location of fire hydrants on the territory of the City of Rimouski**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
License information was derived automatically
This dataset shows the locations of fire hydrants throughout the Eugene and Springfield area.
This layer represents the locations of fire hydrants in Lake County, FL. It is a work in progress and is continually updated as new information is obtained.
This layer is sourced from gis.fortlauderdale.gov.
How close is your house to a fire hydrant? Use the Measure Tool to find out!Search for your address using the search bar in the upper-right corner of the page.Click on the Measure Tool, select the Distance icon, and set the units to Feet.Click on the map to begin the measurement, and double-click to finish it.