Green Spaces is a geospatial dataset of polygons that is a point-in-time generalized representation of existing parks and open spaces within the City of Toronto. Green Spaces includes public parks, beaches, parts of ravines, golf courses, cemeteries, and other open space areas such as those offered by various private institutions. These spaces may or may not be publicly accessible and are either publicly owned/maintained or they are privately owned/maintained. Green Spaces is not an exhaustive dataset of all the public and private parks and open spaces within the City. It does not encompass all areas protected by the Ravine and Natural Feature Protection By-Law, by Environmentally Significant Areas or by Natural Heritage Areas. Green Spaces is primarily intended to visualize our existing overall parks and open space system. It is used to symbolize the green coloured areas in many of the City's mapping products such as Toronto's Interactive Map or the Toronto Parkland Strategy[^1]. This dataset is jointly maintained by the Geospatial Competency Centre (GCC) and the Parks, Forestry & Recreation division (PFR). The attribute field in this dataset titled "AREA_CLASS" indicates whether the GCC or PFR maintain the data and the type of green space it is. PFR Green Spaces PFR Green Spaces are owned and/or operated by the City of Toronto and are derived from PFR's Parkland Asset Repository. They include the area classes: Park, Golf Course, Cemetery, Hydro Field/Utility Corridor, and others. Representation of Green Spaces can change overtime – due to new park acquisitions, development/reconfiguration of land etc. – PFR works to continuously improve the City-PFR-owned portions of this dataset as new information arises. GCC Green Spaces All other Green Spaces were created by the GCC and include area classes with the prefix of "OTHER_". These green spaces are derived through city-wide parcel analysis. [^1]This Green Spaces layer cannot be used to reproduce the results of the 2019 Parkland Strategy, however the GCC Green Spaces portions of the dataset was used to help visualize Other Open Spaces in "Figure 06: Toronto’s Parks and Open Space Network" of the report. The Toronto Parkland Strategy is currently in the process of being updated and new parkland data is not yet finalized.
The dataset, titled "Green Spaces," falls under the domain of city government, locations and mapping, and parks and recreation. It is a geospatial dataset that provides a generalized representation of existing parks and open spaces within the City of Toronto. The dataset includes public parks, beaches, parts of ravines, golf courses, cemeteries, and other open space areas. It is primarily intended to visualize the city's overall parks and open space system and is used in many of the city's mapping products. The dataset is jointly maintained by the Geospatial Competency Centre (GCC) and the Parks, Forestry & Recreation division (PFR). The dataset was published on July 14, 2022, and the metadata was created on October 4, 2024, and last modified on April 9, 2025. The dataset is available in various formats including JSON, CSV, geopackage+sqlite3, and vnd.shp. The dataset is owned by the Parks, Forestry & Recreation division, and the author and publisher's email is gcc@toronto.ca. The dataset is part of the City of Toronto Open Data organization. The resources available in the dataset include various versions of the "Green Spaces" file in different formats. The license for accessing the dataset is not specified. The dataset is tagged under the category of Housing Potential. The location of the dataset is provided, but not specified in the catalogue.
Polygon shapefiles that depicts the Election Polling Subdivisions for the 2023 Mayoral By-election, 2022, 2018, 2014, 2010 and 2006 General Municipal Elections for the City of Toronto. The files work well with the GCC Centreline file and the address points file.
Polygon shapefiles that depicts the Election Polling Subdivisions for the 2023 Mayoral By-election, 2022, 2018, 2014, 2010 and 2006 General Municipal Elections for the City of Toronto. The files work well with the GCC Centreline file and the address points file.
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Green Spaces is a geospatial dataset of polygons that is a point-in-time generalized representation of existing parks and open spaces within the City of Toronto. Green Spaces includes public parks, beaches, parts of ravines, golf courses, cemeteries, and other open space areas such as those offered by various private institutions. These spaces may or may not be publicly accessible and are either publicly owned/maintained or they are privately owned/maintained. Green Spaces is not an exhaustive dataset of all the public and private parks and open spaces within the City. It does not encompass all areas protected by the Ravine and Natural Feature Protection By-Law, by Environmentally Significant Areas or by Natural Heritage Areas. Green Spaces is primarily intended to visualize our existing overall parks and open space system. It is used to symbolize the green coloured areas in many of the City's mapping products such as Toronto's Interactive Map or the Toronto Parkland Strategy[^1]. This dataset is jointly maintained by the Geospatial Competency Centre (GCC) and the Parks, Forestry & Recreation division (PFR). The attribute field in this dataset titled "AREA_CLASS" indicates whether the GCC or PFR maintain the data and the type of green space it is. PFR Green Spaces PFR Green Spaces are owned and/or operated by the City of Toronto and are derived from PFR's Parkland Asset Repository. They include the area classes: Park, Golf Course, Cemetery, Hydro Field/Utility Corridor, and others. Representation of Green Spaces can change overtime – due to new park acquisitions, development/reconfiguration of land etc. – PFR works to continuously improve the City-PFR-owned portions of this dataset as new information arises. GCC Green Spaces All other Green Spaces were created by the GCC and include area classes with the prefix of "OTHER_". These green spaces are derived through city-wide parcel analysis. [^1]This Green Spaces layer cannot be used to reproduce the results of the 2019 Parkland Strategy, however the GCC Green Spaces portions of the dataset was used to help visualize Other Open Spaces in "Figure 06: Toronto’s Parks and Open Space Network" of the report. The Toronto Parkland Strategy is currently in the process of being updated and new parkland data is not yet finalized.