Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset consists of a shapefile of administrative boundaries (municipal wards) in Glasgow around 1920, based on 'Map of the City of Glasgow shewing Parliamentary Divisions as fixed in 1918, and Municipal Wards as fixedin 1920'. The map is held in the Glasgow City Archives, reference DTC/13/98.
Shapefile construction was undertaken as described in the related article:
Angelopoulos, K., Stewart, G. and Mancy, R. Local infectious disease experience influences vaccine refusal rates: a natural experiment. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1986.
The attributes which are included in the shapefile are Ward_Num (municipal ward number) and Ward_Name (municipal ward name). Full details of the wards numbers and ward names are given in the Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the City of Glasgow for 1921, which can be accessed at https://wellcomecollection.org/works/jxgvafxr/items.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Community councils are required to be established by local authorities. They are the most local tier of statutory representation in Scotland. They bridge the gap between local authorities and communities and help to make public bodies aware of the opinions and needs of the communities they represent. Community councils are statutory consultees under various processes, such as for planning applications. There are many instances where polygons do not tessellate or snap to local authority boundaries. The Spatial Hub processing can correct for some minor gap errors (<5m) but not larger ones. Such gaps in the dataset mean that it cannot potentially be used for some kinds of spatial analysis e.g. point in polygon, because some point locations may fall within the gaps. These gaps either require amendment at source or approval for the IS to change. "name", "url" and "status" are now MANDATORY fields for this dataset.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This collection consists of ESRI shapefiles for Glasgow around 1910:
sanitary district boundaries in 1903 (Sanitary_Districts.shp, etc.)
municipal ward boundaries in 1912 (Wards_1912.shp, etc.)
registration district boundaries within the area of the City of Glasgow in 1913 (Registration_Districts.shp, etc.)
routes of main rivers (River Clyde and River Kelvin) around 1915 (Rivers.shp, etc.)
route of the Glasgow Subway around 1915 (Subway.shp, etc.)
For details of shapefile construction, please see the descriptions in the following article:
Angelopoulos, K., Stewart, G. and Mancy, R. Local infectious disease experience influences vaccine refusal rates: a natural experiment. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1986.
Details of construction and references to original map sources are provided in the second paragraph of the section "Geographic conversion" in the online supplementary materials of the above reference. Further information about the boundaries is provided in the caption of Figure S1 of the supplementary materials. Additional contextual information is provided in both the main text and supplementary materials.
Data shows different registered social landlords with their respective addresses and contact details within Glasgow City Council administrative boundary.
Data Zones are the key geography for the dissemination of small area statistics in Scotland and are widely used across the public sector. Composed of groups of Census Output Areas, Data Zones are large enough that statistics can be presented accurately without fear of disclosure and yet small enough that they can be used to represent communities. They are designed to have roughly standard populations of 500 to 1,000 household residents, nest within local authorities (at the time of the Census), and have compact shapes that respect physical boundaries where possible. When Data Zones were originally created for the 2001 Census, they were designed to contain households with similar social characteristics. Aggregations of Data Zones can be used to provide estimates for higher level geographies where official statistics might not otherwise be available. Data Zones also represent a relatively stable geography that can be used to analyse change over time, with changes only occurring after a Census. Following the update to Data Zones using 2022 Census data, there are now 7,392 Data Zones covering the whole of Scotland.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
A Polling District is a geographical subdivision of an electoral area such as an electoral Ward within which a polling place is designated. The Representation of the People Act 1983 places a duty on LA to divide the local authority area into polling districts based on ward boundaries, and to designate a polling place for each district. LAs also have a duty to keep these polling arrangements under review. The Electoral Administration Act 2006 introduced amendments to the 1983 Act (which in turn has been superseded by The Electoral Administration Act 2013). Now local authorities must conduct a full review (with public consultation) of its polling districts and polling places every four years, however adjustments to the boundaries of polling districts and the designation of polling places within LA wards can be proposed at any time in response to changes in ward boundaries or to the availability of premises that can be reasonably designated as polling places. The Fifth Review of Electoral Arrangements concluded in May 2016 when the LGBCS made recommendations to Scottish Ministers for the number of Councillors and the electoral ward boundaries in each of Scotland's 32 local authorities. The review recommended changes in 30 LA areas of which all but 5 were accepted and came into force on 30th Sept 2016. As a result, ward boundaries (and therefore polling districts and possibly polling places) were changed after this date in time for the May 2017 elections. The following fields are now MANDATORY fields for this dataset. "district_code" - The polling district code, as defined by the LA "UPRN" - The Unique Property Reference Number for the Corporate Address Gazeteer record of the polling place related to the polling district, as defined by the LA "polling_place" - The name and/or address of the polling place (based on the Corporate Address Gazeteer record) related to the polling district, as defined by the LA
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
To view the LEZ boundary on the map, please use the search tool (the magnifyng glass) on the tool bar and enter a place name, street or postcode. This Dataset shows the boundary of Glasgow City Council Low Emission Zone. A Low Emission Zone is an area where a person may not drive a vehicle which does not meet a specified emission standard. LEZs are intended to reduce pollution levels and improve air quality in areas where standards are not being met. LEZs are based on a penalty notice approach to effectively ban non-compliant vehicles. Glasgow's LEZ is being phased in to give everyone time to prepare and from 1 June 2023, phase 2 (all vehicles) Low Emission Zone (LEZ) will come into force. All vehicles entering the city centre zone area will need to meet the less-polluting emission standards or face a penalty charge. There are some exemptions and zone residents have extra time to comply.
https://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitationshttps://inspire.ec.europa.eu/metadata-codelist/LimitationsOnPublicAccess/noLimitations
Local government in Scotland comprises 32 unitary local authorities (council areas), which are divided into wards for electoral purposes. There are currently a total of 1,226 councilors elected from 355 wards - with each Mainland ward returning 3 or 4 councillors. Island wards may have 1 or 2 member wards. Boundaries Scotland is responsible for recommendations on the definition of ward boundaries, however, the definitive dataset is delineated by Ordnance Survey for inclusion in their BoundaryLine product.
The geographic framework for the administration of all elections - Council, Scottish Parliament and List, Westminster and European elections. Updated in February2017to reflect changes resulting from Fifth Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements submitted May 2016. The dataset is complete.December 2019 District NL43 amended to follow Westminster Parliamentary Constituency Boundary.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) (Scotland) Act 1997 a local authority may determine which parts of its area are of special architectural or historic interest and may designate these as Conservation Areas. The public will normally be consulted on any proposal to designate conservation areas or to change their boundaries. There are over 600 Conservation Areas in Scotland. Many were designated in the early 1970s, but some have since been re-designated, merged, renamed, given smaller or larger boundaries and new ones have been added. They can cover historic land, battlefields, public parks, designed landscapes or railways but most contain groups of buildings extending over areas of a village, town or city. Further planning controls on development can be made by way of an Article 4 Direction, which may or may not be associated with a Conservation Area. We can capture Article 4 Directions separately - go to the upload for that data. However, the final published data layer will contain Conservation Areas, Conservation Areas with associated Article 4 Directions, Article 4 Directions associated with a Conservation Area, and a small number of discrete Article 4 Direction areas.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
This file contains names and codes for health boards (HB) in Scotland, as at 1st April 2019. (File Size - 16 KB)Field Names - HB19CD, HB19CDS, HB19NM, FIDField Types - Text, Text, TextField Lengths - 9, 3, 25FID = The FID, or Feature ID is created by the publication process when the names and codes / lookup products are published to the Open Geography portal.The boundaries and codes for Greater Glasgow and Clyde and Lanarkshire health boards have changed following The Glasgow City Council Area and North Lanarkshire Council Area (Cardowan by Stepps) Boundaries Amendment Order 2018REST URL of Feature Access Service – https://services1.arcgis.com/ESMARspQHYMw9BZ9/arcgis/rest/services/Health_Boards_April_2019_Names_and_Codes_in_Scotland_2022/FeatureServer
School catchment area boundaries for Gaelic Primary Schools within Glasgow.
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Super Output Areas are a geographic hierarchy designed to improve the reporting of small-area statistics.
The Lower Super Output Areas and Data Zones list contains 42,619 areas of the following constituent geographies:
Please visit ONS Beginner's Guide to UK Geography for more info.
The boundaries are available as either extent of the realm (usually this is the Mean Low Water mark but in some cases boundaries extend beyond this to include off shore islands) or
clipped to the coastline (Mean High Water mark).
The dataset shows number of unique cyclists, count of bike trips (regardless of unique riders) both from different directions, total number of bike trips regardless of the direction they are taking, time taken to complete bike trips from different directions and other cycling statistics. These ranges were extractetd using peak riding seasons with AM hours counts between 7am and 10am and PM Hours count between 4pm and 8pm. These time frames were built from Strava's internal analysis that shows the typical patterns and travel areas. The street network used is within Glasgow boundary although it might stretch to streets in neighbouring local authorities. The figures were normalized so that the values fall between 0 and 1. A Data Dictionary file is attached which contains all the field names and their respective meanings. The data points used to heat the map were between 2013-01-01 to 2013-12-31 Data licensed from Strava, Inc Licence: None strava-opendata.zip - https://dataservices.open.glasgow.gov.uk/Download/Organisation/4cd61d96-69cc-4114-a7da-54a218863c0a/Dataset/03f86c25-f7d2-457f-ae08-b356ac41d60f/File/4e1925c5-73b5-443c-99c7-b0e5ae0ace50/Version/ea9809d4-29d7-4472-8f57-351b17416582
The Scottish Vacant and Derelict Land Survey (SVDLS) is a national data collection undertaken to establish the extent and state of vacant and derelict land in Scotland. The survey has been operating since 1988. This survey is associated with the Scottish Vacant and Derelict Land Fund, under which cash allocations are made to Planning Authorities.
Every year the Scottish Government Communities Analysis Division produce a National Statistics statistical publication based on data collected and processed from all Local Authorities and Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park Authority. This includes an SVDLS Site Register. Where spatial data is provided by Planning Authorities, the data is reviewed to make sure it matches the published SVDLS Site Register.
Improvement Service then combine the spatial data with the SVDLS site Register for the current survey year (2023 published in 2024 for most authorities) and combined it to this year's SVDLS Site Register (using the site reference).
Where Planning Authorities have not provided spatial data for the current year, their previous spatial data return has been used, or where there is no spatial data at all for site we have buffered the easting and northing provided in the survey, to create a circular polygon area for the site.
The definitive data source is the SVDLS Site Register available here: https://www.gov.scot/publications/scottish-vacant-and-derelict-land-survey---site-register/
The Scottish Government vacant and derelict land statistics are also available as a map, and can be accessed at https://isshinyapps.shinyapps.io/SVDL_mapping_2023/
The map also shows planning application information as of October 2024, where a planning application has been submitted within an SVDL site boundary. This data is drawn directly from local authorities and does not form part of the Scottish Government vacant and derelict land statistical return or the Scottish Government Planning Applications statistical return. These statistics may be found on the Scottish Government Planning Statistics website: https://www.gov.scot/collections/planning-statistics/ -these data have been quality assured by the Scottish Government.
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
A ‘polling place’ is defined as the building or area in which a polling station will be located. A ‘polling station’ is the room or area within the polling place where voting takes place. Unlike polling districts and polling places which are fixed by the local authority, polling stations are chosen by the (Acting) Returning Officer for the election. The Representation of the People Act 1983 places a duty on LA to divide the local authority area into polling districts based on ward boundaries, and to designate a polling place for each district. LAs also have a duty to keep these polling arrangements under review. The Electoral Administration Act 2006 introduced amendments to the 1983 Act (which in turn has been superseded by The Electoral Administration Act 2013). Now local authorities must conduct a full review (with public consultation) of its polling districts and polling places every four years, however adjustments to the boundaries of polling districts and the designation of polling places within LA wards can be proposed at any time in response to changes in ward boundaries or to the availability of premises that can be reasonably designated as polling places.
Schools and catchemnts areas
https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licenceshttps://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
This file contains the names and codes for local authority districts (LAD) and unitary authorities (UA) in the United Kingdom as at 31st December 2019 (File Size - 48KB) Field Names - LAD19CD, LAD19NM, LAD19NMW, FIDField Types - Text, Text, Text, NumberField Lengths - 9, 35, 24FID = The FID, or Feature ID is created by the publication process when the names and codes / lookup products are published to the Open Geography portal. File includes the following LAD changesE06000058 - Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole - new unitary authorityE06000059 - Dorset - new unitary authority - (Dorset county abolished)E07000244 - East Suffolk - new local authority district (Suffolk Coastal and Waveney districts abolished)E07000245 - West Suffolk - new local authority district (Forest Heath and St Edmundsbury districts abolished)E07000246 - Somerset West and Taunton - new local authority district (Taunton Deane and West Somerset districts abolished)S12000049 - Glasgow City - recoded due to boundary change, S12000050 - North Lanarkshire - recoded due to boundary change.REST URL of Feature Access Service – https://services1.arcgis.com/ESMARspQHYMw9BZ9/arcgis/rest/services/LAD_Dec_2019_Names_and_Codes_in_the_United_Kingdom_2022/FeatureServer
The Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Act 2012 dissolved the eight former police and fire areas in to a single service for all of Scotland. Following from this, a new organisational structure for Fire and Rescue Services was created, which is now comprised of fourteen Local Senior Officer Areas and three Service Delivery Areas. Local Senior Officer Areas are based on aggregations of Local Authority areas (defined by Ordnance Survey BoundaryLine), and remain in alignment with Local Authorities as these change.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset consists of a shapefile of administrative boundaries (municipal wards) in Glasgow around 1920, based on 'Map of the City of Glasgow shewing Parliamentary Divisions as fixed in 1918, and Municipal Wards as fixedin 1920'. The map is held in the Glasgow City Archives, reference DTC/13/98.
Shapefile construction was undertaken as described in the related article:
Angelopoulos, K., Stewart, G. and Mancy, R. Local infectious disease experience influences vaccine refusal rates: a natural experiment. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1986.
The attributes which are included in the shapefile are Ward_Num (municipal ward number) and Ward_Name (municipal ward name). Full details of the wards numbers and ward names are given in the Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the City of Glasgow for 1921, which can be accessed at https://wellcomecollection.org/works/jxgvafxr/items.