35 datasets found
  1. d

    Mobile Home Parks

    • catalog.data.gov
    • s.cnmilf.com
    Updated Nov 2, 2022
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    HIFLD (2022). Mobile Home Parks [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/mobile-home-parks
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 2, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    HIFLD
    Description

    Homeland Infrastructure Foundation-Level Data (HIFLD) geospatial data sets containing information on Mobile Home Parks.

  2. a

    Mobile Home Parks Map Book July 2025

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • citizens-information-center-volusiacountyfl.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jul 24, 2025
    + more versions
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    County of Volusia (2025). Mobile Home Parks Map Book July 2025 [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/documents/d0ba2cf49ca249798086770671f28f39
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 24, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    County of Volusia
    Description

    Volusia County Mobile Home Park Map Book. Shows all the known mobile home park communities in Volusia County, their jursidiction, and whether they are in a low-income area according to the HUD Opportunity Zones (Valid till 12/2026). Created and generated by IT-GISLIS July 2025.

  3. S

    Manufactured Home Park Registrations: Beginning 2020

    • data.ny.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Feb 7, 2025
    + more versions
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    New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (2025). Manufactured Home Park Registrations: Beginning 2020 [Dataset]. https://data.ny.gov/w/nq2i-9jge/caer-yrtv?cur=it3UCaqwIwX
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    tsv, csv, application/rssxml, json, application/rdfxml, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 7, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    New York State Department of Taxation and Finance
    Description

    This dataset captures the park name, address, and county in which a manufactured home park is located; the number of site capacity and number of occupied sites; the name of the park contact, and the owner.. New York State Department of Taxation and Finance oversees the registration of these parks in accordance with NYS Real Property Law Section 233 subdivision (v) which requires owners of manufactured home parks with three or more homes register their park with the Department of Taxation and Finance.

    Pre-2020 (historical) data was collected by NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal (HCR) and is available at https://data.ny.gov/d/sxi2-m23m.

  4. a

    Broward County Mobile Home and RV Parks Polygons

    • geohub-bcgis.opendata.arcgis.com
    • data.pompanobeachfl.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 6, 2020
    + more versions
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    Broward County GIS (2020). Broward County Mobile Home and RV Parks Polygons [Dataset]. https://geohub-bcgis.opendata.arcgis.com/items/4e5c0409fb0d4421bb61228b7779c9e9
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 6, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Broward County GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    Developed as part of the critical facilities maps for The Emergency Operations Center. Capacity data for the licensed facilities only, is provided by the Florida Dept. of Environmental Health, please go to http://www.doh.state.fl.us/environment/community/mobile/index.html.

    Source: BCGIS, EOC

    Effective Date:

    Last Update: 09/2019

    Update Cycle: As needed

  5. m

    Maryland Land Use 2018 - Land Use

    • data.imap.maryland.gov
    • hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Feb 5, 2025
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    ArcGIS Online for Maryland (2025). Maryland Land Use 2018 - Land Use [Dataset]. https://data.imap.maryland.gov/datasets/maryland-land-use-2018-land-use/about
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 5, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    ArcGIS Online for Maryland
    Area covered
    Description

    The map was developed using available parcel polygons attributed with tax assessment data as of project initiation in early 2020, Computer-Assisted Mass Appraisal (CAMA) data dated February 2020, and the Chesapeake Bay Program’s 2017/18 Land Use Land Cover data (2022 edition), subsequently referred to as “CBP LULC.” The map also incorporates land use datasets provided by county and municipal jurisdictions to the extent possible while maintaining standard statewide classification definitions and rules. The product was developed to be consistent with the 2018 National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) imagery and CBP LULC dataset. MDP’s draft updated land use classification scheme is available as a separate document. This product is a beta release for public use and further testing. Methods for developing subsequent releases beyond this 2018 baseline will be refined based on feedback from the user community. Urban Land Uses 11 Low-density residential - Detached single-family/duplex dwelling units, yards, and associated areas. Includes generalized areas with lot sizes of less than five acres but at least one-half acre (0.2 to 2 dwelling units/acre). 12 Medium-density residential - Detached single-family/duplex, attached single-unit row housing, yards, and associated areas Includes generalized areas with lot sizes of less than one-half acre but at least one-eighth acre (2 to 8 dwelling units/acre). 13 High-density residential - Attached single-unit row housing, garden apartments, high-rise apartments/condominiums, mobile home and trailer parks, yards, and associated areas. Includes generalized areas with more than eight dwelling units per acre. This may include subsidized housing. 14 Commercial - Retail and wholesale services. Areas used primarily for the sale of products and services, including associated yards and parking areas. This category may include airports, welcome houses, telecommunication towers, and boat marinas. 15 Industrial - Manufacturing and industrial parks, including associated warehouses, storage yards, research laboratories, and parking areas. Warehouses that are returned by a commercial query should be categorized as industrial. This also includes power plants. 16 Institutional - Elementary and secondary schools, middle schools, junior and senior high schools, public and private colleges and universities, military installations (built-up areas only, including buildings and storage, training, and similar areas), churches, medical and health facilities, correctional facilities, government offices and facilities that are clearly separable from any surrounding natural or agricultural land cover, and other non-profit uses. 17 Extractive - Surface mining operations, including sand and gravel pits, quarries, coal surface mines, and deep coal mines. Status of activity (active vs. abandoned) is not distinguished. 18 Open urban land - Includes parks, open spaces, recreational areas not classified as institutional, golf courses, and cemeteries. Includes only built-up and turf-dominated areas that are clearly separable from any surrounding natural or agricultural land cover. 190 – Very Low Density Residential – Clustered residential parcels that have lot sizes less than 20 acres but at least five acres (0.2 to 0.05 dwelling units/acre) 50 – Water 80 Transportation - Transportation features include impervious roads, roadway rights-of-way, and parcels primarily containing light rail or metro stations and park-and-ride lots. 99 – Other Land - Remaining land not covered under another category. Examples include but are not limited to unbuilt lots, rural land, single-family residential parcels greater than or equal to 20 acres in size, and undeveloped portions of large parcels containing urban uses. May include undeveloped land that is either developable or constrained from further development.Note: Urban Land Use classifications encompass the entire parcel on parcels less than five acres that contain a structure as of 2018 based on the Maryland Department of Planning and Maryland State Department of Assessment and Taxation’s Computer-Assisted Mass Appraisal (CAMA) Building dataset. Elsewhere, the Chesapeake Bay Program’s 2017/18 Land Use Land Cover dataset (2022 edition) is used to delineate the extent of development on a parcel. For more information, see Methodology Documentation.Feature Service Link: https://mdgeodata.md.gov/imap/rest/services/PlanningCadastre/MD_LandUse/MapServer/1This copy has been projected to "WGS 1984 Web Mercator (auxiliary sphere)" and, therefore, is for illustrative purposes only. To use the data for geospatial analysis or area calculations, please download the copy projected to "NAD_1983 StatePlane Maryland FIPS 1900" from MDP's website at https://planning.maryland.gov/pages/ourproducts/downloadfiles.aspx.

  6. l

    Land Use Inventory 2005

    • data.lexingtonky.gov
    Updated Dec 19, 2020
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    Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government (2020). Land Use Inventory 2005 [Dataset]. https://data.lexingtonky.gov/items/8113df2403c048a0837a0bec68906f3a
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government
    Area covered
    Description

    The 2005 land use boundary data layer is an integral part of the planning data in the Lexington-Fayette-Urban County Government Geographic Information System. This information is used by the Division of Planning in case review, enforcement, and long range planning. GIS data layers are accessed by personnel in most LFUCG divisions for basic applications such as viewing, querying, and map output production.This dataset is designed to represent the existing land use during 2005 within Lexington-Fayette County. The land use in the county is surveyed by the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government Division of Planning as an initial step in reviewing the comprehensive plan. The dataset is created by dissolving parcels with same land use and utilization of street centerlines as edges.The data is in ESRI feature class format, but can be exported to any number of supported formats, including shapefile and dxf. The native projection for the data is Kentucky State Plane North (NAD83), but may have been reprojected for use in other applications. Please check metadata to determine current projection.Code Values Provided by the LFUCG Division of Planning• DUP: Duplex housing - Two dwelling units sharing a common wall on one lot • TH: Townhomes - Attached dwelling units sharing a common wall, but not a floor to ceiling, with one dwelling unit per lot. Duplexes on separate lots are townhomes. • MFH: Multi-family housing - Three or more attached dwelling units on one lot. Trailor Parks • COM: Commercial: Retail/Restaurant/Personal Services - Commercial: Retail (food, non-food, including gas and alcohol), Restaurants, Entertainment, Applebees Park, Red Mile, Rupp Arena, Personal Services such as Hair and Nail Salons, Tax Preparation, Dry Cleaners, and Athletic Clubs. • OFF: Professional Office - All types of offices including Medical, Engineering/Architectural, Law, Consulting, Real Estate, and Research and Development. • GRQ: Lodging/Group Quarters - Dormitories, Hotels/Motels, Fraternities and Sororities, Nursing Homes/Assisted Living Facilities. • AG: Agricultural - Livestock, Crops, or Woodlands • CON: Construction - Contractor Yards, Concrete Mixing, Building Supplies, Lumber Yards • LI: Light Industry/Manufacturing/Warehouse - All industrial uses that are non-HI and non Construction. Outdoor storage • HI: Heavy Industry - Quarry, Chemical Processing, Stockyards, Gas Tank Farms, junk yards,towing• WHS: Warehousing - Warehouses & storage facilities • TR: Transportation - Airport, Bus Depots/Transit Center, Truck Freight Terminals, Distribution Facilities, Rail yards. • GS: Green Space - Undevelopable areas • P/SP: Public/Semi-public Use - Universities, Colleges, Cemeteries, Libraries, Corrections, Institutions, Museums, Cultural Facilities, Social Services, Fire Stations, Civic Clubs, Government Offices, Public work facilities, Utilities • HLC: Healthcare - Hospitals, Outpatient Surgery Centers, and Office Parks for medical, dental, and pharmaceutical uses exclusively. • REC: Recreation - Parks (private/public), Golf Courses (private/public), Skating Rinks, Neighborhood Recreation Centers, and Multipurpose Indoor Recreation (like the Stadium), Community Centers, Senior Centers • SCH: Schools - Verify coverage on maps. • REL: Places of Worship - Churches, Synagogues, Mosques. Verify coverage on maps. • PL: Parking Lot - Parking as a Principle Use • VAC: Vacant Lot - Non-greenway, Non-park, no structures • UUT: Underutilized Candidates - Vacant Buildings, Dilapidated Buildings.

  7. P

    Broward County Mobile Home and RV Parks Points

    • data.pompanobeachfl.gov
    • geohub-bcgis.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 6, 2020
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    External Datasets (2020). Broward County Mobile Home and RV Parks Points [Dataset]. https://data.pompanobeachfl.gov/dataset/broward-county-mobile-home-and-rv-parks-points
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    arcgis geoservices rest api, kml, html, geojson, zip, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 6, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    BCGISData
    Authors
    External Datasets
    Area covered
    Broward County
    Description

    Developed as part of the critical facilities maps for The Emergency Operations Center. Capacity data for the licensed facilities only, is provided by the Florida Dept. of Environmental Health, please go to http://www.doh.state.fl.us/environment/community/mobile/index.html. Addresses are physical addresses not mailing addresses.

    Source: BCGIS, EOC

    Effective Date:

    Last Update: 09/2019

    Update Cycle: As needed

  8. c

    2019 Regional Land Use Information for Orange County

    • hub.scag.ca.gov
    Updated Aug 30, 2024
    + more versions
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    rdpgisadmin (2024). 2019 Regional Land Use Information for Orange County [Dataset]. https://hub.scag.ca.gov/items/b56dfdbd6770497ca800506928f36f1e
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    rdpgisadmin
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This is SCAG 2019 Regional Land Use dataset developed for the final 2024 Connect SoCal, the 2024-2050 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS), including general plan land use, specific plan land use, zoning code, and existing land use at parcel-level (approximately five million parcels) for 197 local jurisdictions in the SCAG region.The regional land use dataset is developed (1) to aid in SCAG’s regional transportation planning, scenario planning and growth forecasting, (2) facilitate policy discussion on various planning issues, and (3) enhance information database to better serve SCAG member jurisdictions, research institutes, universities, developers, general public, etc. It is the most frequently and widely utilized SCAG geospatial data. From late 2019 to early 2020, SCAG staff obtained the 2019 parcel boundary GIS file and tax roll property information from county assessor’s offices. After months of data standardization and clean-up process, SCAG staff released the 2019 parcel boundary GIS files along with the 2019 Annual Land Use dataset in February 2021. In December 2021, SCAG staff successfully developed the preliminary dataset of the 2019 regional land use data and released the draft SCAG Data/Map Book in May 2022. The preliminary land use data was reviewed by local jurisdictions during the Local Data Exchange (LDX) process for Connect SoCal 2024. As a part of the final 2019 regional land use data development process, SCAG staff made every effort to review the local jurisdictions’ inputs and comments and incorporated any updates to the regional land use datasets. The products of this project has been used as one of the key elements for Connect SoCal 2024 plan development, growth forecasting, scenario planning, and SCAG’s policy discussion on various planning issues, as well as Connect SoCal key growth strategy analysis.Note: This dataset is intended for planning purposes only, and SCAG shall incur no responsibility or liability as to the completeness, currentness, or accuracy of this information. SCAG assumes no responsibility arising from use of this information by individuals, businesses, or other public entities. The information is provided with no warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Users should consult with each local jurisdiction directly to obtain the official land use information.2019 SCAG Land Use Codes: LegendLand Use Description Single Family Residential1110 Single Family Residential 1111 High Density Single Family Residential (9 or more DUs/ac) 1112 Medium Density Single Family Residential (3-8 DUs/ac) 1113 Low Density Single Family Residential (2 or less DUs/ac)Multi-Family Residential1120 Multi-Family Residential 1121 Mixed Multi-Family Residential1122 Duplexes, Triplexes and 2- or 3-Unit Condominiums and Townhouses1123 Low-Rise Apartments, Condominiums, and Townhouses1124 Medium-Rise Apartments and Condominiums1125 High-Rise Apartments and CondominiumsMobile Homes and Trailer Parks1130 Mobile Homes and Trailer Parks1131 Trailer Parks and Mobile Home Courts, High-Density1132 Mobile Home Courts and Subdivisions, Low-DensityMixed Residential1140 Mixed Residential1100 ResidentialRural Residential 1150 Rural ResidentialGeneral Office1210 General Office Use 1211 Low- and Medium-Rise Major Office Use 1212 High-Rise Major Office Use 1213 SkyscrapersCommercial and Services1200 Commercial and Services1220 Retail Stores and Commercial Services 1221 Regional Shopping Center 1222 Retail Centers (Non-Strip With Contiguous Interconnected Off-Street Parking) 1223 Retail Strip Development1230 Other Commercial 1231 Commercial Storage 1232 Commercial Recreation 1233 Hotels and MotelsFacilities1240 Public Facilities1241 Government Offices1242 Police and Sheriff Stations1243 Fire Stations1244 Major Medical Health Care Facilities1245 Religious Facilities1246 Other Public Facilities1247 Public Parking Facilities1250 Special Use Facilities1251 Correctional Facilities1252 Special Care Facilities1253 Other Special Use FacilitiesEducation1260 Educational Institutions1261 Pre-Schools/Day Care Centers1262 Elementary Schools1263 Junior or Intermediate High Schools1264 Senior High Schools1265 Colleges and Universities1266 Trade Schools and Professional Training FacilitiesMilitary Installations1270 Military Installations1271 Base (Built-up Area)1272 Vacant Area1273 Air Field1274 Former Base (Built-up Area)1275 Former Base Vacant Area1276 Former Base Air FieldIndustrial1300 Industrial 1310 Light Industrial1311 Manufacturing, Assembly, and Industrial Services1312 Motion Picture and Television Studio Lots1313 Packing Houses and Grain Elevators1314 Research and Development1320 Heavy Industrial1321 Manufacturing1322 Petroleum Refining and Processing1323 Open Storage1324 Major Metal Processing1325 Chemical Processing1330 Extraction1331 Mineral Extraction - Other Than Oil and Gas1332 Mineral Extraction - Oil and Gas1340 Wholesaling and WarehousingTransportation, Communications, and Utilities1400 Transportation, Communications, and Utilities 1410 Transportation1411 Airports1412 Railroads1413 Freeways and Major Roads1414 Park-and-Ride Lots1415 Bus Terminals and Yards1416 Truck Terminals1417 Harbor Facilities1418 Navigation Aids1420 Communication Facilities1430 Utility Facilities1431 Electrical Power Facilities1432 Solid Waste Disposal Facilities1433 Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities1434 Water Storage Facilities1435 Natural Gas and Petroleum Facilities1436 Water Transfer Facilities 1437 Improved Flood Waterways and Structures1438 Mixed Utilities1440 Maintenance Yards1441 Bus Yards1442 Rail Yards1450 Mixed Transportation1460 Mixed Transportation and UtilityMixed Commercial and Industrial1500 Mixed Commercial and IndustrialMixed Residential and Commercial1600 Mixed Residential and Commercial 1610 Residential-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed Use 1620 Commercial-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed UseOpen Space and Recreation1800 Open Space and Recreation 1810 Golf Courses 1820 Local Parks and Recreation 1830 Regional Parks and Recreation 1840 Cemeteries 1850 Wildlife Preserves and Sanctuaries 1860 Specimen Gardens and Arboreta 1870 Beach Parks 1880 Other Open Space and Recreation 1890 Off-Street TrailsAgriculture2000 Agriculture2100 Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2110 Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2120 Non-Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2200 Orchards and Vineyards2300 Nurseries2400 Dairy, Intensive Livestock, and Associated Facilities2500 Poultry Operations2600 Other Agriculture2700 Horse RanchesVacant3000 Vacant3100 Vacant Undifferentiated3200 Abandoned Orchards and Vineyards3300 Vacant With Limited Improvements3400 Beaches (Vacant)1900 Urban VacantWater4000 Water4100 Water, Undifferentiated4200 Harbor Water Facilities4300 Marina Water Facilities4400 Water Within a Military Installation4500 Area of Inundation (High Water)Specific Plan7777 Specific PlanUnder Construction1700 Under ConstructionUndevelopable or Protected Land8888 Undevelopable or Protected LandUnknown9999 Unknown

  9. a

    Mobile Home Park Lots

    • community-esrica-apps.hub.arcgis.com
    • communautaire-esrica-apps.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Sep 8, 2017
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    The City of Saint John (2017). Mobile Home Park Lots [Dataset]. https://community-esrica-apps.hub.arcgis.com/items/47ea80b0f2324978b87800e5ef8ce502
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 8, 2017
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The City of Saint John
    Area covered
    Description

    Polygon features that represent the locations of mobile home park lots.

  10. a

    2019 Regional Land Use Information for San Bernardino County

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • hub.scag.ca.gov
    Updated Aug 30, 2024
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    rdpgisadmin (2024). 2019 Regional Land Use Information for San Bernardino County [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/da97aecbc4534f149e6a865506171af0
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    rdpgisadmin
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This is SCAG 2019 Regional Land Use dataset developed for the final 2024 Connect SoCal, the 2024-2050 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS), including general plan land use, specific plan land use, zoning code, and existing land use at parcel-level (approximately five million parcels) for 197 local jurisdictions in the SCAG region.The regional land use dataset is developed (1) to aid in SCAG’s regional transportation planning, scenario planning and growth forecasting, (2) facilitate policy discussion on various planning issues, and (3) enhance information database to better serve SCAG member jurisdictions, research institutes, universities, developers, general public, etc. It is the most frequently and widely utilized SCAG geospatial data. From late 2019 to early 2020, SCAG staff obtained the 2019 parcel boundary GIS file and tax roll property information from county assessor’s offices. After months of data standardization and clean-up process, SCAG staff released the 2019 parcel boundary GIS files along with the 2019 Annual Land Use dataset in February 2021. In December 2021, SCAG staff successfully developed the preliminary dataset of the 2019 regional land use data and released the draft SCAG Data/Map Book in May 2022. The preliminary land use data was reviewed by local jurisdictions during the Local Data Exchange (LDX) process for Connect SoCal 2024. As a part of the final 2019 regional land use data development process, SCAG staff made every effort to review the local jurisdictions’ inputs and comments and incorporated any updates to the regional land use datasets. The products of this project has been used as one of the key elements for Connect SoCal 2024 plan development, growth forecasting, scenario planning, and SCAG’s policy discussion on various planning issues, as well as Connect SoCal key growth strategy analysis.Note: This dataset is intended for planning purposes only, and SCAG shall incur no responsibility or liability as to the completeness, currentness, or accuracy of this information. SCAG assumes no responsibility arising from use of this information by individuals, businesses, or other public entities. The information is provided with no warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Users should consult with each local jurisdiction directly to obtain the official land use information.2019 SCAG Land Use Codes: LegendLand Use Description Single Family Residential1110 Single Family Residential 1111 High Density Single Family Residential (9 or more DUs/ac) 1112 Medium Density Single Family Residential (3-8 DUs/ac) 1113 Low Density Single Family Residential (2 or less DUs/ac)Multi-Family Residential1120 Multi-Family Residential 1121 Mixed Multi-Family Residential1122 Duplexes, Triplexes and 2- or 3-Unit Condominiums and Townhouses1123 Low-Rise Apartments, Condominiums, and Townhouses1124 Medium-Rise Apartments and Condominiums1125 High-Rise Apartments and CondominiumsMobile Homes and Trailer Parks1130 Mobile Homes and Trailer Parks1131 Trailer Parks and Mobile Home Courts, High-Density1132 Mobile Home Courts and Subdivisions, Low-DensityMixed Residential1140 Mixed Residential1100 ResidentialRural Residential 1150 Rural ResidentialGeneral Office1210 General Office Use 1211 Low- and Medium-Rise Major Office Use 1212 High-Rise Major Office Use 1213 SkyscrapersCommercial and Services1200 Commercial and Services1220 Retail Stores and Commercial Services 1221 Regional Shopping Center 1222 Retail Centers (Non-Strip With Contiguous Interconnected Off-Street Parking) 1223 Retail Strip Development1230 Other Commercial 1231 Commercial Storage 1232 Commercial Recreation 1233 Hotels and MotelsFacilities1240 Public Facilities1241 Government Offices1242 Police and Sheriff Stations1243 Fire Stations1244 Major Medical Health Care Facilities1245 Religious Facilities1246 Other Public Facilities1247 Public Parking Facilities1250 Special Use Facilities1251 Correctional Facilities1252 Special Care Facilities1253 Other Special Use FacilitiesEducation1260 Educational Institutions1261 Pre-Schools/Day Care Centers1262 Elementary Schools1263 Junior or Intermediate High Schools1264 Senior High Schools1265 Colleges and Universities1266 Trade Schools and Professional Training FacilitiesMilitary Installations1270 Military Installations1271 Base (Built-up Area)1272 Vacant Area1273 Air Field1274 Former Base (Built-up Area)1275 Former Base Vacant Area1276 Former Base Air FieldIndustrial1300 Industrial 1310 Light Industrial1311 Manufacturing, Assembly, and Industrial Services1312 Motion Picture and Television Studio Lots1313 Packing Houses and Grain Elevators1314 Research and Development1320 Heavy Industrial1321 Manufacturing1322 Petroleum Refining and Processing1323 Open Storage1324 Major Metal Processing1325 Chemical Processing1330 Extraction1331 Mineral Extraction - Other Than Oil and Gas1332 Mineral Extraction - Oil and Gas1340 Wholesaling and WarehousingTransportation, Communications, and Utilities1400 Transportation, Communications, and Utilities 1410 Transportation1411 Airports1412 Railroads1413 Freeways and Major Roads1414 Park-and-Ride Lots1415 Bus Terminals and Yards1416 Truck Terminals1417 Harbor Facilities1418 Navigation Aids1420 Communication Facilities1430 Utility Facilities1431 Electrical Power Facilities1432 Solid Waste Disposal Facilities1433 Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities1434 Water Storage Facilities1435 Natural Gas and Petroleum Facilities1436 Water Transfer Facilities 1437 Improved Flood Waterways and Structures1438 Mixed Utilities1440 Maintenance Yards1441 Bus Yards1442 Rail Yards1450 Mixed Transportation1460 Mixed Transportation and UtilityMixed Commercial and Industrial1500 Mixed Commercial and IndustrialMixed Residential and Commercial1600 Mixed Residential and Commercial 1610 Residential-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed Use 1620 Commercial-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed UseOpen Space and Recreation1800 Open Space and Recreation 1810 Golf Courses 1820 Local Parks and Recreation 1830 Regional Parks and Recreation 1840 Cemeteries 1850 Wildlife Preserves and Sanctuaries 1860 Specimen Gardens and Arboreta 1870 Beach Parks 1880 Other Open Space and Recreation 1890 Off-Street TrailsAgriculture2000 Agriculture2100 Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2110 Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2120 Non-Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2200 Orchards and Vineyards2300 Nurseries2400 Dairy, Intensive Livestock, and Associated Facilities2500 Poultry Operations2600 Other Agriculture2700 Horse RanchesVacant3000 Vacant3100 Vacant Undifferentiated3200 Abandoned Orchards and Vineyards3300 Vacant With Limited Improvements3400 Beaches (Vacant)1900 Urban VacantWater4000 Water4100 Water, Undifferentiated4200 Harbor Water Facilities4300 Marina Water Facilities4400 Water Within a Military Installation4500 Area of Inundation (High Water)Specific Plan7777 Specific PlanUnder Construction1700 Under ConstructionUndevelopable or Protected Land8888 Undevelopable or Protected LandUnknown9999 Unknown

  11. c

    2019 Regional Land Use Information for Riverside County

    • hub.scag.ca.gov
    Updated Aug 30, 2024
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    rdpgisadmin (2024). 2019 Regional Land Use Information for Riverside County [Dataset]. https://hub.scag.ca.gov/items/d6aaeefb45174e08bf25f091b4a0266c
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    rdpgisadmin
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This is SCAG 2019 Regional Land Use dataset developed for the final 2024 Connect SoCal, the 2024-2050 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS), including general plan land use, specific plan land use, zoning code, and existing land use at parcel-level (approximately five million parcels) for 197 local jurisdictions in the SCAG region.The regional land use dataset is developed (1) to aid in SCAG’s regional transportation planning, scenario planning and growth forecasting, (2) facilitate policy discussion on various planning issues, and (3) enhance information database to better serve SCAG member jurisdictions, research institutes, universities, developers, general public, etc. It is the most frequently and widely utilized SCAG geospatial data. From late 2019 to early 2020, SCAG staff obtained the 2019 parcel boundary GIS file and tax roll property information from county assessor’s offices. After months of data standardization and clean-up process, SCAG staff released the 2019 parcel boundary GIS files along with the 2019 Annual Land Use dataset in February 2021. In December 2021, SCAG staff successfully developed the preliminary dataset of the 2019 regional land use data and released the draft SCAG Data/Map Book in May 2022. The preliminary land use data was reviewed by local jurisdictions during the Local Data Exchange (LDX) process for Connect SoCal 2024. As a part of the final 2019 regional land use data development process, SCAG staff made every effort to review the local jurisdictions’ inputs and comments and incorporated any updates to the regional land use datasets. The products of this project has been used as one of the key elements for Connect SoCal 2024 plan development, growth forecasting, scenario planning, and SCAG’s policy discussion on various planning issues, as well as Connect SoCal key growth strategy analysis.Note: This dataset is intended for planning purposes only, and SCAG shall incur no responsibility or liability as to the completeness, currentness, or accuracy of this information. SCAG assumes no responsibility arising from use of this information by individuals, businesses, or other public entities. The information is provided with no warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Users should consult with each local jurisdiction directly to obtain the official land use information.2019 SCAG Land Use Codes: LegendLand Use Description Single Family Residential1110 Single Family Residential 1111 High Density Single Family Residential (9 or more DUs/ac) 1112 Medium Density Single Family Residential (3-8 DUs/ac) 1113 Low Density Single Family Residential (2 or less DUs/ac)Multi-Family Residential1120 Multi-Family Residential 1121 Mixed Multi-Family Residential1122 Duplexes, Triplexes and 2- or 3-Unit Condominiums and Townhouses1123 Low-Rise Apartments, Condominiums, and Townhouses1124 Medium-Rise Apartments and Condominiums1125 High-Rise Apartments and CondominiumsMobile Homes and Trailer Parks1130 Mobile Homes and Trailer Parks1131 Trailer Parks and Mobile Home Courts, High-Density1132 Mobile Home Courts and Subdivisions, Low-DensityMixed Residential1140 Mixed Residential1100 ResidentialRural Residential 1150 Rural ResidentialGeneral Office1210 General Office Use 1211 Low- and Medium-Rise Major Office Use 1212 High-Rise Major Office Use 1213 SkyscrapersCommercial and Services1200 Commercial and Services1220 Retail Stores and Commercial Services 1221 Regional Shopping Center 1222 Retail Centers (Non-Strip With Contiguous Interconnected Off-Street Parking) 1223 Retail Strip Development1230 Other Commercial 1231 Commercial Storage 1232 Commercial Recreation 1233 Hotels and MotelsFacilities1240 Public Facilities1241 Government Offices1242 Police and Sheriff Stations1243 Fire Stations1244 Major Medical Health Care Facilities1245 Religious Facilities1246 Other Public Facilities1247 Public Parking Facilities1250 Special Use Facilities1251 Correctional Facilities1252 Special Care Facilities1253 Other Special Use FacilitiesEducation1260 Educational Institutions1261 Pre-Schools/Day Care Centers1262 Elementary Schools1263 Junior or Intermediate High Schools1264 Senior High Schools1265 Colleges and Universities1266 Trade Schools and Professional Training FacilitiesMilitary Installations1270 Military Installations1271 Base (Built-up Area)1272 Vacant Area1273 Air Field1274 Former Base (Built-up Area)1275 Former Base Vacant Area1276 Former Base Air FieldIndustrial1300 Industrial 1310 Light Industrial1311 Manufacturing, Assembly, and Industrial Services1312 Motion Picture and Television Studio Lots1313 Packing Houses and Grain Elevators1314 Research and Development1320 Heavy Industrial1321 Manufacturing1322 Petroleum Refining and Processing1323 Open Storage1324 Major Metal Processing1325 Chemical Processing1330 Extraction1331 Mineral Extraction - Other Than Oil and Gas1332 Mineral Extraction - Oil and Gas1340 Wholesaling and WarehousingTransportation, Communications, and Utilities1400 Transportation, Communications, and Utilities 1410 Transportation1411 Airports1412 Railroads1413 Freeways and Major Roads1414 Park-and-Ride Lots1415 Bus Terminals and Yards1416 Truck Terminals1417 Harbor Facilities1418 Navigation Aids1420 Communication Facilities1430 Utility Facilities1431 Electrical Power Facilities1432 Solid Waste Disposal Facilities1433 Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities1434 Water Storage Facilities1435 Natural Gas and Petroleum Facilities1436 Water Transfer Facilities 1437 Improved Flood Waterways and Structures1438 Mixed Utilities1440 Maintenance Yards1441 Bus Yards1442 Rail Yards1450 Mixed Transportation1460 Mixed Transportation and UtilityMixed Commercial and Industrial1500 Mixed Commercial and IndustrialMixed Residential and Commercial1600 Mixed Residential and Commercial 1610 Residential-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed Use 1620 Commercial-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed UseOpen Space and Recreation1800 Open Space and Recreation 1810 Golf Courses 1820 Local Parks and Recreation 1830 Regional Parks and Recreation 1840 Cemeteries 1850 Wildlife Preserves and Sanctuaries 1860 Specimen Gardens and Arboreta 1870 Beach Parks 1880 Other Open Space and Recreation 1890 Off-Street TrailsAgriculture2000 Agriculture2100 Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2110 Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2120 Non-Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2200 Orchards and Vineyards2300 Nurseries2400 Dairy, Intensive Livestock, and Associated Facilities2500 Poultry Operations2600 Other Agriculture2700 Horse RanchesVacant3000 Vacant3100 Vacant Undifferentiated3200 Abandoned Orchards and Vineyards3300 Vacant With Limited Improvements3400 Beaches (Vacant)1900 Urban VacantWater4000 Water4100 Water, Undifferentiated4200 Harbor Water Facilities4300 Marina Water Facilities4400 Water Within a Military Installation4500 Area of Inundation (High Water)Specific Plan7777 Specific PlanUnder Construction1700 Under ConstructionUndevelopable or Protected Land8888 Undevelopable or Protected LandUnknown9999 Unknown

  12. c

    2019 Regional Land Use Information for Ventura County

    • hub.scag.ca.gov
    Updated Aug 30, 2024
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    rdpgisadmin (2024). 2019 Regional Land Use Information for Ventura County [Dataset]. https://hub.scag.ca.gov/datasets/dcfd019b2a804b24a3cb37386e323a28
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 30, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    rdpgisadmin
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This is SCAG 2019 Regional Land Use dataset developed for the final 2024 Connect SoCal, the 2024-2050 Regional Transportation Plan/Sustainable Communities Strategy (RTP/SCS), including general plan land use, specific plan land use, zoning code, and existing land use at parcel-level (approximately five million parcels) for 197 local jurisdictions in the SCAG region.The regional land use dataset is developed (1) to aid in SCAG’s regional transportation planning, scenario planning and growth forecasting, (2) facilitate policy discussion on various planning issues, and (3) enhance information database to better serve SCAG member jurisdictions, research institutes, universities, developers, general public, etc. It is the most frequently and widely utilized SCAG geospatial data. From late 2019 to early 2020, SCAG staff obtained the 2019 parcel boundary GIS file and tax roll property information from county assessor’s offices. After months of data standardization and clean-up process, SCAG staff released the 2019 parcel boundary GIS files along with the 2019 Annual Land Use dataset in February 2021. In December 2021, SCAG staff successfully developed the preliminary dataset of the 2019 regional land use data and released the draft SCAG Data/Map Book in May 2022. The preliminary land use data was reviewed by local jurisdictions during the Local Data Exchange (LDX) process for Connect SoCal 2024. As a part of the final 2019 regional land use data development process, SCAG staff made every effort to review the local jurisdictions’ inputs and comments and incorporated any updates to the regional land use datasets. The products of this project has been used as one of the key elements for Connect SoCal 2024 plan development, growth forecasting, scenario planning, and SCAG’s policy discussion on various planning issues, as well as Connect SoCal key growth strategy analysis.Note: This dataset is intended for planning purposes only, and SCAG shall incur no responsibility or liability as to the completeness, currentness, or accuracy of this information. SCAG assumes no responsibility arising from use of this information by individuals, businesses, or other public entities. The information is provided with no warranty of any kind, expressed or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Users should consult with each local jurisdiction directly to obtain the official land use information.2019 SCAG Land Use Codes: LegendLand Use Description Single Family Residential1110 Single Family Residential 1111 High Density Single Family Residential (9 or more DUs/ac) 1112 Medium Density Single Family Residential (3-8 DUs/ac) 1113 Low Density Single Family Residential (2 or less DUs/ac)Multi-Family Residential1120 Multi-Family Residential 1121 Mixed Multi-Family Residential1122 Duplexes, Triplexes and 2- or 3-Unit Condominiums and Townhouses1123 Low-Rise Apartments, Condominiums, and Townhouses1124 Medium-Rise Apartments and Condominiums1125 High-Rise Apartments and CondominiumsMobile Homes and Trailer Parks1130 Mobile Homes and Trailer Parks1131 Trailer Parks and Mobile Home Courts, High-Density1132 Mobile Home Courts and Subdivisions, Low-DensityMixed Residential1140 Mixed Residential1100 ResidentialRural Residential 1150 Rural ResidentialGeneral Office1210 General Office Use 1211 Low- and Medium-Rise Major Office Use 1212 High-Rise Major Office Use 1213 SkyscrapersCommercial and Services1200 Commercial and Services1220 Retail Stores and Commercial Services 1221 Regional Shopping Center 1222 Retail Centers (Non-Strip With Contiguous Interconnected Off-Street Parking) 1223 Retail Strip Development1230 Other Commercial 1231 Commercial Storage 1232 Commercial Recreation 1233 Hotels and MotelsFacilities1240 Public Facilities1241 Government Offices1242 Police and Sheriff Stations1243 Fire Stations1244 Major Medical Health Care Facilities1245 Religious Facilities1246 Other Public Facilities1247 Public Parking Facilities1250 Special Use Facilities1251 Correctional Facilities1252 Special Care Facilities1253 Other Special Use FacilitiesEducation1260 Educational Institutions1261 Pre-Schools/Day Care Centers1262 Elementary Schools1263 Junior or Intermediate High Schools1264 Senior High Schools1265 Colleges and Universities1266 Trade Schools and Professional Training FacilitiesMilitary Installations1270 Military Installations1271 Base (Built-up Area)1272 Vacant Area1273 Air Field1274 Former Base (Built-up Area)1275 Former Base Vacant Area1276 Former Base Air FieldIndustrial1300 Industrial 1310 Light Industrial1311 Manufacturing, Assembly, and Industrial Services1312 Motion Picture and Television Studio Lots1313 Packing Houses and Grain Elevators1314 Research and Development1320 Heavy Industrial1321 Manufacturing1322 Petroleum Refining and Processing1323 Open Storage1324 Major Metal Processing1325 Chemical Processing1330 Extraction1331 Mineral Extraction - Other Than Oil and Gas1332 Mineral Extraction - Oil and Gas1340 Wholesaling and WarehousingTransportation, Communications, and Utilities1400 Transportation, Communications, and Utilities 1410 Transportation1411 Airports1412 Railroads1413 Freeways and Major Roads1414 Park-and-Ride Lots1415 Bus Terminals and Yards1416 Truck Terminals1417 Harbor Facilities1418 Navigation Aids1420 Communication Facilities1430 Utility Facilities1431 Electrical Power Facilities1432 Solid Waste Disposal Facilities1433 Liquid Waste Disposal Facilities1434 Water Storage Facilities1435 Natural Gas and Petroleum Facilities1436 Water Transfer Facilities 1437 Improved Flood Waterways and Structures1438 Mixed Utilities1440 Maintenance Yards1441 Bus Yards1442 Rail Yards1450 Mixed Transportation1460 Mixed Transportation and UtilityMixed Commercial and Industrial1500 Mixed Commercial and IndustrialMixed Residential and Commercial1600 Mixed Residential and Commercial 1610 Residential-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed Use 1620 Commercial-Oriented Residential/Commercial Mixed UseOpen Space and Recreation1800 Open Space and Recreation 1810 Golf Courses 1820 Local Parks and Recreation 1830 Regional Parks and Recreation 1840 Cemeteries 1850 Wildlife Preserves and Sanctuaries 1860 Specimen Gardens and Arboreta 1870 Beach Parks 1880 Other Open Space and Recreation 1890 Off-Street TrailsAgriculture2000 Agriculture2100 Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2110 Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2120 Non-Irrigated Cropland and Improved Pasture Land2200 Orchards and Vineyards2300 Nurseries2400 Dairy, Intensive Livestock, and Associated Facilities2500 Poultry Operations2600 Other Agriculture2700 Horse RanchesVacant3000 Vacant3100 Vacant Undifferentiated3200 Abandoned Orchards and Vineyards3300 Vacant With Limited Improvements3400 Beaches (Vacant)1900 Urban VacantWater4000 Water4100 Water, Undifferentiated4200 Harbor Water Facilities4300 Marina Water Facilities4400 Water Within a Military Installation4500 Area of Inundation (High Water)Specific Plan7777 Specific PlanUnder Construction1700 Under ConstructionUndevelopable or Protected Land8888 Undevelopable or Protected LandUnknown9999 Unknown

  13. V

    Loudoun Zoning

    • data.virginia.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    • +10more
    Updated Feb 6, 2025
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    Loudoun County (2025). Loudoun Zoning [Dataset]. https://data.virginia.gov/dataset/loudoun-zoning
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    csv, zip, kml, arcgis geoservices rest api, geojson, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 6, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Loudoun County GIS
    Authors
    Loudoun County
    Area covered
    Loudoun County
    Description


    More Metadata

    The zoning layer constitutes the official zoning map for Loudoun County and is a component of the official zoning ordinance. It reflects expiration of grandfathering provisions of the 1972 Zoning Ordinance for certain proffered PD-H and R-Districts created prior to June 16, 1993. The zoning data is owned and maintained by Loudoun County, Virginia Department of Building and Development. Purpose: The purpose is to facilitate the administration of the zoning ordinance. The data are used extensively for taxation, subdivision review, permitting, and planning. Supplemental Information: Boundaries generally follow parcel lines, although there are several exceptions. The zoning data does not include zoning overlay districts, such as LDN, Floodplain, Quarry, or Mountainside Overlay Districts. Although the layer represents the official zoning map, a determination should be requested from the Zoning Administrator to verify zoning for a particular property. Data are stored in the corporate ArcSDE Geodatabase as a feature class. The coordinate system is Virginia State Plane (North), Zone 4501, datum NAD83 HARN. It is also important to note that in order to determine the Zoning Ordinance Amendments (ZOAMs) that are applicable to a particular parcel governed under the Revised 1993 Zoning Ordinance located within the Route 28 Tax District, the ZO_ZONE_DATE, Opt-In Letter, proffer statement, rezoning plat and/or concept development plan should be consulted as applicable. For an official determination regarding the applicable zoning, zoning ordinance text and/or whether proffered conditions may apply to a certain property, please contact the Zoning Administrator in the Department of Building and Development. Data are stored in the corporate ArcSDE Geodatabase as a feature class. The coordinate system is Virginia State Plane (North), Zone 4501, datum NAD83 HARN. Maintenance and Update Frequency: The zoning layer is updated on a daily basis as staff researches zoning for individual properties. Completeness Report: Features may have been eliminated or generalized due to scale and intended use. To assist Loudoun County, Virginia in the maintenance of the data, please provide any information concerning discovered errors, omissions, or other discrepancies found in the data. Ordinance: 1972, 1993 or Revised 1993; ordinance under which the property is administered; does not necessarily correspond to the zone (e.g. a property may have a zone code of PDH3 for the zone in accordance with the 1993 ordinance, but it should have a value of 1972 for ordinance if it is administered as another zone, such as PDH24, under the 1972 ordinance). The zone a property is administered as is not carried in the layer. Due to a court order, it is important to note that there are two developments that remain to be governed under 1972 Zoning Ordinance that are located outside of the Route 28 Tax District. These are the PD-H zoned areas of Mirror Ridge and Countryside. It is noted that these areas were already reflected under the 1972 Zoning Ordinance on previous zoning maps. Zone Codes: A10- Agriculture: Agriculture and low density residential development with a maximum density of one unit per 10 acres. Cluster and hamlet options. A3- Agricultural/Residential: Agriculture and low density residential development with a maximum density of one unit per 3 acres with a predominantly agricultural character. Cluster and hamlet options. AR1- Agricultural Rural - 1: Rural business and residential uses: 1.0 du per 20-acres/; 1.0 du per 10 clustered AR2- Agricultural Rural - 2: Rural business and residential uses: 1.0 du per 40-acres/; 1.0 du per 20 clustered C1- Commercial: Commercial primarily retail and personal services. C1 is under 1972 ordinance and is only within the Route 28 Tax District. CLI- Commercial/Light Industry: Mix of compatible light industrial uses, industrial-related business uses, and related retail uses on minimum two acre lots. Only along Route 50 from Fairfax/Loudoun County line west to Route 659. New CLI district rezoning limited to parcels contiguous to existing CLI district. CR1- Countryside Residential-1: Residential development with a maximum density of 1 unit per acre. Not served by public water and sewer. Cluster and hamlet options. CR2- Countryside Residential-2: Residential development with a maximum density of 2 units per acre. Not served by public water and sewer. Cluster option with public water and/or sewer. CR3- Countryside Residential-3: Residential development with a maximum density of 3 units per acre. Not served by public water and sewer. Cluster option with public sewer. CR4- Countryside Residential-4: Residential development with a maximum density of 4 units per acre. Not served by public water and sewer. GB- General Business: General destination retail and service businesses that serve the needs of residents and businesses in the vicinity, on one-half acre lots. Access to major collector or arterial roads (but cannot front on or abut collector or arterial roads). I1- Industrial: Primarily heavy industrial. I1 is under 1972 ordinance and is only within the Route 28 Tax District. IAD- Dulles: Washington-Dulles International Airport JLMA1- Joint Land Management Area-1: Residential uses, cluster and traditional town subdivision design; 1.0 du/40,000 sq. ft. JLMA2- Joint Land Management Area-2: Residential uses, cluster and traditional town subdivision design; 1.0 du/20,000 sq. ft. JLMA3- Joint Land Management Area-3: Residential uses, cluster and traditional town subdivision design; 1.0 du per 3 acres JLMA20- Joint Land Management Area-20: Rural business and residential uses, large lot subdivision design (no cluster option); 1.0 du per 20 acres MRHI- Mineral Resource/Heavy Industry: Diabase resource extraction operations (quarries) co-located with compatible heavy industrial uses. Specific use limitations for stone quarry operations. PDAAAR- Planned Development-Active Adult/Age Restricted: Planned adult residential communities. PDAAAR districts have a minimum of 25 acres, public sewer and water, and are served by one or more major arterial or collector roads. Consistent with locations designated for high-density urban residential development. PDCCCC- Planned Development-Commercial Center (Community Center): Serves retail shopping needs of surrounding community. Minimum of 6 acres, maximum of 20 acres. PDCCNC- Planned Development-Commercial Center (Neighborhood Center): Serves convenience needs of adjacent residential neighborhoods. Minimum of 1.5 acres, maximum of 6 acres. PDCCRC- Planned Development-Commercial Center (Regional Center): Large scale commercial centers which provide a wide range of retail, office, and service uses, with one or more anchor stores, to the regional market. Minimum of 60 acres with controlled access to arterial roads. PDCCSC- Planned Development-Commercial Center (Small Regional Center): Small regional centers consisting of individual large and small scale commercial uses selling a broad range of goods or services to a market beyond the local community. Minimum of 20 acres, maximum of 60 acres. Controlled access to a major collector. PDCH- Planned Development-Commercial Highway: Highway related commercial districts. PDCH is under the 1972 ordinance and is only within the Route 28 Tax District. PDGI- Planned Development-General Industrial: Medium intensity industrial uses with public nuisance. potential. PDH3- Planned Development Housing-3: Mixed use residential communities including single family and multifamily housing products with supportive non-residential uses, subject to an adopted concept development plan. Maximum overall residential density of 3 units per acre. PDH4- Planned Development Housing-4: Mixed use residential communities including single family and multifamily housing products with supportive non-residential uses, subject to an adopted concept development plan. Maximum overall residential density of 4 units per acre. PDH6- Planned Development Housing-6: Mixed use residential communities including single family and multifamily housing products with supportive non-residential uses, subject to an adopted concept development plan. Maximum overall residential density of 6 units per acre. PDIP- Planned Development-Industrial Park: Light and medium industrial uses with supporting accessory uses and facilities designed with a parklike environment. May be subject to a concept development plan. PDMUB- Planned Development-Mixed Use Business: A compact pedestrian oriented mixed use business district of regional office, light industrian, retail, service, civic and high density residential uses located in close proximity to each other. Minimum size of 25 acres per District. PDOP- Planned Development-Office Park: Office park established primarily for administrative, business, and professional offices designed in a parklike environment and subject to an adopted concept development plan. PDRDP- Planned Development-Research and Development Park: Planned mixed employment park, subject to an adopted concept development plan, which allows the mixing of research and development firms, office complexes, certain types of manufacturing and interrelated land uses. PDRV- Planned Development-Rural Village: A rural, pedestrian oriented, mixed use community consisting of single family detached houses, townhomes, apartments, stores, and employment centers located on 20% of the

  14. d

    OC Development Authority

    • portal.datadrivendetroit.org
    • detroitdata.org
    • +6more
    Updated Oct 16, 2016
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    Oakland County, Michigan (2016). OC Development Authority [Dataset]. https://portal.datadrivendetroit.org/datasets/oakgov::oc-development-authority
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 16, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Oakland County, Michigan
    Area covered
    Description

    BY USING THIS WEBSITE OR THE CONTENT THEREIN, YOU AGREE TO THE TERMS OF USE. The DevelopmentAuthority polygon feature class identifies certain types of entities that encourage development/redevelopment in designated areas. This feature class currently represents Downtown Development Authorities (DDA), Tax Increment Finance Authorities (TIFA), and Local Development Finance Authorities (LDFA); however, it will also depict Corridor Improvement Authorities (CIA) and Brownfield Redevelopment Authorities (BRA) in the future. These five types of authorities have the ability to capture tax increment financing (TIF). The features were digitized using legal descriptions, parcel lists, and maps that were provided to the State of Michigan Office of the Great Seal and/or Oakland County Equalization by the authority. The key attributes are Name (official name of the authority), Type (the type of development authority), and DevelopmentPlan (yes/no indicating if the feature represents an area that is part of a development plan and can caputre tax increment financing).Tax Increment Financing is a tool used to promote redevelopment and community improvement projects by channeling funding toward projects in targeted areas. TIF is captured from the increase of property values from a base year. Millage rates from taxing jurisdictions are applied to the increased value. The resulting tax revenue is directed to the authority, rather than the appropriate jurisdiction. Beginning in 1994, taxing jurisdictions have the option to "opt out" of having its taxes captured by the authority. Also since 1994, school taxes may no longer be captured unless they are necessary to make payments on existing eligible obligations. For more information about TIF, see Michigan Department of Treasury's Tax Increment Financing FAQ web page at http://www.michigan.gov/treasury/0,1607,7-121-3218---F,00.html. The State of Michigan has adopted enabling legislation to allow TIF through five types of authorities. Each type of authority has a focus relating to development/redevelopment: Downtown Development Authority (PA 197 of 1975) Correct and prevent deterioration in business districtsEncourage historic preservationPromote economic growth of the districts Tax Increment Finance Authority (PA 450 of 1980)Prevent urban deteriorationEncourage economic development and activityEncourage neighborhood revitalization and historic preservationClosed to new applicants since 1987Allows the development of virtually any type of land use Local Development Finance Authority (PA 281 of 1986)Encourage local developmentPromote conditions of employmentPromote economic growthLimited to business activities involving:ManufacturingAgricultural processingHigh-technology activitiesEnergy productionBusiness incubators Brownfield Redevelopment Authority (PA 381 of 1996)Promote revitalization, redevelopment, and reuse of certain propertyFocus on tax reverted, blighted, or functionally obsolete propertyMDEQ must approve brownfield redevelopment areas Corridor Improvement Authority (PA 281 of 2005)Correct and prevent deterioration in business districtsEncourage historic preservationPromote economic growth of the districtsMust be adjacent to a road classified as an arterial or collectorThese quasi-public entities are created by resolution through a community's governing body. CIA and LDFA boundaries may cross municipal boundaries. In the case of these multi-jurisdictional authorities, both communities must pass resolutions establishing authority. There is currently only one Joint LDFA (Cities of Southfield and Troy) and there are no CIAs in Oakland County. When the community establishes the authority, it must also define the geographic boundaries in which it will operate. DDAs and CIAs are authorized to levy and collect taxes through a special assessment on all properties within the authority boundary. After the authority and its boundaries are established, the authority creates a tax increment financing and development plan. The plan estimates the amount of tax increment financing that will be captured and lists specific projects on which it will be spent. It also defines the development area where the tax increment financing and projects will occur. The development area must be completely within the authority boundary; however, it may be coincident with the authority boundary. An authority may contain multiple development areas, each with its own development and tax increment financing plan. BRAs normally designate development areas as a one or two parcels for a specific development project, while the other types of authorities define development areas as a larger area. Also, LDFAs are only allowed to capture TIF from parcels in a permitted use, such as manufacturing. There may be both eliglible and inelgible parcels within a development area; however, the inelgible parcels do not participate in TIF capture. The base year used to calculate the amount of tax increment financing is set when the development plan is adopted. If the development plan is expanded at a later date, the base year could be reset for the entire development area or the capture could be calculated using multiple base years. The source for the base year was the tax billing code used by Oakland County Equalization. When no tax billing code was available (for communities that don't use the county's assessing system), the community was contacted to obtain the base year. When two separate authorities overlap, each authority can establish overlapping development areas. The authority that first created the development area has first claim on tax increment financing capture. Authority boundaries are represented using multiple features when the development area is not coincident with the authority boundary. One feature represents the development area and a second feature represents the remainder of the authority district that is not part of the development area. Multiple features are also used to represent authorities that have multiple development areas or development areas that have multiple base years. Brownfield Redevelopment Authorities are unique in that the authority boundaries are generally defined as the entire municipality. For this reason, the non-development areas of BRA's have been excluded from this data. The following list shows communities in Oakland County that have established a BRA: City of Auburn Hills City of Birmingham City of Farmington City of Farmington Hills City of Ferndale City of Hazel Park Charter Township of Highland Village of Holly City of Madison Heights Village of Milford County of Oakland City of Oak Park City of Pontiac City of Rochester City of Rochester Hills Charter Twp of Royal Oak City of Royal Oak City of Southfield City of Troy Charter Township of Waterford Source documents for the boundary of each feature were obtained from the State of Michigan Office of the Great Seal, Oakland County Equalization, and the Oakland County Treasurer's office. These could be in the form of a legal description, parcel list, and/or map. For several boundaries, multiple sources were available and conflicted with each other. When this occurred, hierarchy was given to the legal description, then a parcel list, over the map, and the conflict is noted in the Comments field. However, if a parcel was shown in a parcel list, but not described in the authority based on the legal description, then it was still shown in the authority.It should also be noted that legal descriptions were not digitized using exact coordinate geometry. Instead, features were created by referencing the legal description to snap vertices to parcels, right-of-way, section corners, subdivisions, and lots. Features digitized from a legal description or map included road and railroad rights-of-way as it was described or shown in the document.For vague legal descriptions and parcel lists, right-of-way was addressed uniquely for each authority. Some source documents had statements that all or half of the surrounding right-of-way is to be included in the boundary, but some did not address right-of-way at all. In these cases, right-of-way was addressed distinctly for each authority based on the type of authority and the source documents with the method used recorded in the Comments field. The data will be updated on an "as needed" basis when authorities amend their development plans or new authorities are established. Oakland County Equalization and the Oakland County Treasurer's Office will notify and forward the source documents of necessary revisions to Oakland County Planning and Economic Development Services who is the custodian of the feature class. Communities will be contacted annually to verify that the districts have not changed without the knowledge of county departments. In particular, county departments may not be aware of BRA development projects when no TIF is captured. Lastly, because the tax parcel feature class is revised periodically and it is important for the features to be coincident with the tax parcel feature class, the development authority feature class will also be updated annually to correct conflicts due to parcel shifting.

  15. C

    City-Owned Land Inventory

    • chicago.gov
    • data.cityofchicago.org
    • +3more
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Oct 1, 2025
    + more versions
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    Chicago Department of Planning and Development (2025). City-Owned Land Inventory [Dataset]. https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dcd/supp_info/city-owned_land_inventory.html
    Explore at:
    csv, xml, xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 1, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Chicago Department of Planning and Development
    Description

    Property currently or historically owned and managed by the City of Chicago. Information provided in the database, or on the City’s website generally, should not be used as a substitute for title research, title evidence, title insurance, real estate tax exemption or payment status, environmental or geotechnical due diligence, or as a substitute for legal, accounting, real estate, business, tax or other professional advice. The City assumes no liability for any damages or loss of any kind that might arise from the reliance upon, use of, misuse of, or the inability to use the database or the City’s web site and the materials contained on the website. The City also assumes no liability for improper or incorrect use of materials or information contained on its website. All materials that appear in the database or on the City’s web site are distributed and transmitted "as is," without warranties of any kind, either express or implied as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of any information, and subject to the terms and conditions stated in this disclaimer.

    The following columns were added 4/14/2023:

    • Sales Status
    • Sale Offering Status
    • Sale Offering Reason
    • Square Footage - City Estimate
    • Land Value (2022) -- Note: The year will change over time.

    The following columns were added 3/19/2024:

    • Application Use
    • Grouped Parcels
    • Application Deadline
    • Offer Round
    • Application URL
  16. a

    Attributed Parcel Points

    • data-ramseygis.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Dec 1, 2014
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    Ramsey County GIS Portal (2014). Attributed Parcel Points [Dataset]. https://data-ramseygis.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/attributed-parcel-points
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2014
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Ramsey County GIS Portal
    Area covered
    Description

    UPDATED As of Sept 13, 2022 we have changed some of our attributes. The most significant changes involve fields that began with Primary Tax Payer and Alternate Tax Payer now start with Owner and Tax Payer, respectively.Attributed Parcel Point contains data fields previously contained in Ramsey County Users Group shapefiles, ParPts and OnLineCore, and MetroGIS Parcel Datasets. These fields are populated from a compilation of records and information from various state, county and city offices, and other sources. This data is joined to Ramsey County's Parcel Point data using a property identification number (PIN) which is assigned to both polygons and points and is the primary link to county tax and assessment data. In 1986, parcels were digitized from hand drawn 1:2400 half and 1:1200 quarter section maps. In 1995, the parcel data layer was converted to ArcINFO format and held in the ArcStorm data base. Parcel Points were created from parcel centroids. Parcel Points were converted in 2005 to an ESRI ArcGIS GeoDatabase. When Parcel Points were originally created, there was a one-to-one relationship with identical PINs on both Parcel Polygons and Parcel Points with additional Parcel Points added for Common Interest Communities, Apartment Ownerships or Condominiums, where there is a one-to-many relationship with the Parcel Polygon having the smallest PIN for all associated Parcel Points. Parcel Points were also added for Manufactured Homes and are being added for Apartment Units. The PIN for Manufactured Homes contains a number for the Manufactured Home Park followed by an M then a unique number. The PIN for Apartments Units begins with a U and is followed by the PIN for the Parcel Polygon; attribute data for Apartment Units consists primarily of site address information. The Attributed Parcel Point field, TaxParcelID, can be used to identify the associated Parcel Polygon based on its PIN, and ParcelCode can be used to identify if there is a one-to-many relationship between the point & polygon features.

  17. a

    Mobile Home Park Boundaries

    • boco-health-and-human-services-data-hub-bouldercounty.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 4, 2020
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    Boulder County (2020). Mobile Home Park Boundaries [Dataset]. https://boco-health-and-human-services-data-hub-bouldercounty.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/mobile-home-park-boundaries
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 4, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Boulder County
    Area covered
    Description

    Assessor and Community Planning and Permitting records were used to derive the park boundaries and number of units.

  18. l

    Neighborhoods and Areas

    • maps.leegov.com
    Updated Aug 16, 2024
    + more versions
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    Lee County Florida GIS (2024). Neighborhoods and Areas [Dataset]. https://maps.leegov.com/datasets/d699be0ce50f4a33aced77322dfa3bdd
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 16, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Lee County Florida GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    Area TypesApartment - A collection of single/multi-family buildings owned by a single entity and leased to individuals. Can be located within a platted subdivisionBusiness/Industrial Park - A "well-defined" collection of buildings whose primary use is commercial/office or industrial rather than retail sales. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Condominium - A collection of single/multi-family buildings created by a declaration of condominium. Units are individually owned and governed by an association. Multiple phases with similar names may be merged into a single polygon.Mobile Home/RV Park - The predominant building type is mobile/manufactured homes and/or RV lots. Can be owned by a single company or individual. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Retirement Community - Ownership by a single entity like apartments but with additional services for the elderly.Shopping Center - A "well-defined" collection of buildings whose primary use is retail commerce. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Subdivision - A platted subdivision of land. Generally single-family homes on individually owned lots. Multiple phases with similar names may be merged into a single polygon.Data notes:Subdivision Plats/Condominiums Declarations are used as the base for defining neighborhoods.Subdivisions with similar names (phases) and condominiums within subdivisions have been merged into single neighborhoods.Some condominiums with unique names within subdivisions should remain for searching.Named Apartments, Mobile Home Parks, Business and Industrial Parks, and Shopping Centers are clipped from the generalized subdivisions/condominiums.If subdivisions are well defined (gated, limited entrances, signage, etc.) and the primary building type isn't single-family homes, they should be classified as Apartments, Mobile Home Parks, Business/Industrial Parks, or Shopping Centers instead.If the current name differs from a platted name, the current name in use (found on signage, etc.) is used.

  19. a

    Land Use

    • communal-data-las-cruces.hub.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Nov 7, 2019
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    City of Las Cruces, New Mexico (2019). Land Use [Dataset]. https://communal-data-las-cruces.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/land-use
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 7, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Las Cruces, New Mexico
    License

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

    Area covered
    Description

    This service displays polygons for current land use records and features used to inventory land use patterns. Data is updated, maintained and published from the enterprise GIS database to reflect the most recent information for the City of Las Cruces. Data is organized by activity, structure, or function. Layer Type: PolygonData Owner: Community DevelopmentAuthoritative: YesDownloadable: N/AInitial Dataset Creation: UnknownLast update: 2018 Update Frequency: As necessary Status: CurrentReason for Updates: Classify and inventory land use patternsSource data: N/AReference Source: Land Based Classification Standards (LBCS)Projected Coordinate System: N/AReference information: The classification is a snapshot at one particular time. Uses, businesses, and new construction occur on a daily basis. Also, there may be several parcels that make up a particular site. The classification used was the predominant use of that parcel (e.g., a residential condo plat has a parcel for common area that is mostly parking and parcels for each residential unit, the common area parcel was classed as parking and the parcels for the units as residential). It is important to note that parcel information will change if not updated. The Land-Based Classification System (LBCS) is the industry standard for classification developed by the American Planning Association. It is not an ideal system in that classification codes for certain dimensions do not exist, multiple classes may fit for any one dimension, and a level of subjectivity occurs during classification. LBCS consists of five major categories called “dimensions”: Web site can be found at: https://www.planning.org/lbcs/Five Dimensions for Classifying Land-Use DataActivity1000: Residential activities2000: Shopping, business, or trade activities3000: Industrial, manufacturing, and waste-related activities4000: Social, institutional, or infrastructure-related activities5000: Travel or movement activities6000: Mass assembly of people7000: Leisure activities8000: Natural resources-related activities9000: No human activity or unclassifiable activityActivity refers to the actual use of land based on its observable characteristics. It describes what actually takes place in physical or observable terms (e.g., farming, shopping, manufacturing, vehicular movement, etc.). An office activity, for example, refers only to the physical activity on the premises, which could apply equally to a law firm, a nonprofit institution, a court house, a corporate office, or any other office use. Similarly, residential uses in single-family dwellings, multi-family structures, manufactured houses, or any other type of building, would all be classified as residential activity.Activity Note:The five fields of Activ_20, Activ_40, Activ_60, Activ_80, and Activ_100 were used to identify different actual uses noted on a parcel. The intent was when multiple activity classes exist to determine visually the area taken up by each use (e.g., a parcel has a restaurant and an office, the office takes up 60% of the building to class the restaurant under Activ_40 and the office under Activ_60). This worked for some parcels, but many parcels had more than five possible classes or determination of square footage was difficult to determine because floor plan-site plan information was not readily available. Some pointers on using the activity field include:>On parcels having multiple activity classes an overall activity class was put under Activ_100 in order to extract data more readily. The ‘12’ class represents mixed use. Mixed use for this inventory meant a residential use existed on the same parcel with a non-residential use. It does not assess non-residential mixed use or the type of mixed use (e.g., vertical in same building or different uses in different locations on same parcel). The Activ_100 class for multiple activities used was the highest percentage class by area, except for undeveloped (9990) where the highest percentage class by area was used if 9990 area appeared to be less than 50% of the parcel area. >For contractor yards the 2013 Inventory used either 3000, Industrial-Manufacturing, as a catch-all if the activity was not very clear. It used 3300, Construction Activities, for activities related to construction contractors which is different than the APA Classification. 3300 in the APA Classification is actually describing the stage the parcel would be in physical construction.Function1000: Residence or accommodation functions2000: General sales or services3000: Manufacturing and wholesale trade4000: Transportation, communication, information, and utilities5000: Arts, entertainment, and recreation6000: Education, public admin., health care, and other inst.7000: Construction-related businesses8000: Mining and extraction establishments9000: Agriculture, forestry, fishing and huntingFunction refers to the economic function or type of enterprise using the land. Every land use can be characterized by the type of enterprise it serves. Land-use terms, such as agricultural, commercial, industrial, relate to enterprises. The type of economic function served by the land use gets classified in this dimension; it is independent of actual activity on the land. Enterprises can have a variety of activities on their premises, yet serve a single function. For example, two parcels are said to be in the same functional category if they belong to the same enterprise, even if one is an office building and the other is a factory.Function Note:The five fields of Function, Funct_40, Funct_60, Funct_80, and Funct_100 were used to identify different economic types noted on a parcel. The intent was to indicate the percentage of the building on the parcel related to that function. The function field chosen mimics the activity field in most cases. Unlike Active_100, an overall function class was not put under Funct_100 on parcels with multiple functions. Structural Character1000: Residential buildings2000: Commercial buildings and other specialized structures3000: Public assembly structures4000: Institutional or community facilities5000: Transportation-related facilities6000: Utility and other non-building structures7000: Specialized military structures8000: Sheds, farm buildings, or agricultural facilities9000: No structureStructural character refers to the type of structure or building on the land. Land-use terms embody a structural or building characteristic, which suggests the utility of the space (in a building) or land (when there is no building). Land-use terms, such as single-family house, office building, warehouse, hospital building, or highway, also describe structural characteristic. Although many activities and functions are closely associated with certain structures, it is not always so. Many buildings are often adapted for uses other than its original use. For instance, a single-family residential structure may be used as an office.Structural Note:The predominant structural type class was selected when multiple structures existed on a parcel. Some pointers on using the structural field include:>1130, Accessory Units, in the APA Classification is for secondary units. The 2013 Inventory used this class to identify accessory structures like sheds, etc. Secondary units on the same parcel are noted in the Units field.>1140, townhouse, and 1121, duplex, were sometimes used interchangeably. Townhouse for the APA classification is three or more attached dwelling units. Efforts were made to correct errors, but several likely were not caught. >1150, manufactured home, should be fairly accurate. NM does allow a double-wide manufactured home set on a foundation in a single-family zone. Several instances in the 2008 inventory classed this as 1100 or 1110, single-family site built unit. Efforts were made to class these as 1150 in the 2013 inventory. >1350, Temporary Structures, was used for RV Parks that appear to be more transitory. Otherwise, 1150, Manufactured Home, was used. Site Development Character1000: Site in natural state2000: Developing site3000: Developed site -- crops, grazing, forestry, etc.4000: Developed site -- no buildings and no structures5000: Developed site -- non-building structures6000: Developed site -- with buildings7000: Developed site -- with parks8000: Not applicable to this dimension9000: Unclassifiable site development characterSite development character refers to the overall physical development character of the land. It describes "what is on the land" in general physical terms. For most land uses, it is simply expressed in terms of whether the site is developed or not. But not all sites without observable development can be treated as undeveloped. Land uses, such as parks and open spaces, which often have a complex mix of activities, functions, and structures on them, need categories independent of other dimensions. This dimension uses categories that describe the overall site development characteristics.Site Note:All efforts were made to follow the site classification. Some pointers on using the site field include:>2000, Developing Site, was used if the site was under construction. The entire Metro Verde South Phase 1C plat was used for this class. A lot of home building activity was occurring in this area, but many lots were not under construction at time of site check. Ownership1000: No constraints--private ownership2000: Some constraints--easements or other use restrictions3000: Limited restrictions--leased and other tenancy restrictions4000: Public restrictions--local, state, and federal ownership5000: Other public use restrictions--regional, special districts, etc.6000: Nonprofit ownership restrictions7000: Joint ownership character--public entities8000: Joint ownership character--public, private, nonprofit, etc.9000: Not applicable to this dimensionOwnership refers to the relationship between the use and its land rights. Since the function of most land uses is either public or

  20. l

    Residential Neighborhoods and Commercial Areas

    • maps.leegov.com
    Updated Sep 23, 2025
    + more versions
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    Lee County Florida GIS (2025). Residential Neighborhoods and Commercial Areas [Dataset]. https://maps.leegov.com/datasets/residential-neighborhoods-and-commercial-areas-1
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 23, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Lee County Florida GIS
    Area covered
    Description

    These are not official boundaries. These areas have been defined primarily for use in Lee County's geocode services.Area Types:Apartment - A collection of single/multi-family buildings owned by a single entity and leased to individuals. Can be located within a platted subdivisionBusiness/Industrial Park - A "well-defined" collection of buildings whose primary use is commercial/office or industrial rather than retail sales. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Condominium - A collection of single/multi-family buildings created by a declaration of condominium. Units are individually owned and governed by an association. Multiple phases with similar names may be merged into a single polygon.Mobile Home/RV Park - The predominant building type is mobile/manufactured homes and/or RV lots. Can be owned by a single company or individual. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Retirement Community - Ownership by a single entity like apartments but with additional services for the elderly.Shopping Center - A "well-defined" collection of buildings whose primary use is retail commerce. Limited points of entry with signs at entrances. Boundary usually from subdivision/condominium.Subdivision - A platted subdivision of land. Generally single-family homes on individually owned lots. Multiple phases with similar names may be merged into a single polygon.Data notes:Subdivision Plats/Condominiums Declarations are used as the base for defining neighborhoods.Subdivisions and Condominiums with similar names (phases) have been merged into single neighborhoods.Named Apartments, Mobile Home Parks, Business and Industrial Parks, and Shopping Centers are clipped from the generalized subdivisions/condominiums.If subdivisions are well defined (gated, limited entrances, signage, etc.) and the primary building type isn't single-family homes, they should be classified as Apartments, Mobile Home Parks, Business/Industrial Parks, or Shopping Centers instead.If the current name differs from a platted name, the current name in use (found on signage, etc.) is used.

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HIFLD (2022). Mobile Home Parks [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/mobile-home-parks

Mobile Home Parks

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Dataset updated
Nov 2, 2022
Dataset provided by
HIFLD
Description

Homeland Infrastructure Foundation-Level Data (HIFLD) geospatial data sets containing information on Mobile Home Parks.

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