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Land for the passage or stay of Travellers A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas. Land can be carried out by one or more communal or intercommunal authorities which are identified in the N_REL_TERRAIN_GV_MO_ddd relation table. These data are also related to the #1367 table using the ID_SDAGV field to identify the prescribing SDAGV.
Web Mapping Service containing data about the various designated sites (protected areas) in Scotland.Complete metadata on spatialdata.gov.scot
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The WMS Service (Web Map Service) called Sites and Facilities (Sites and Facilities) allows the visualisation and consultation of the data set representing two levels of higher geographical entities of the EU-Registry data model: • Industrial site (SITE level), considered as an industrial zone that can host different PRTR industrial complexes that have a functional relationship between them, but that may have a different ownership. • Industrial complex (Facility level), considered as one or a group of industrial installations with the same owner and that report jointly to the PRTR registry. The URL of the service is as follows: https://wms.mapama.gob.es/sig/EvaluacionAmbiental/Emisiones/EmplazamientoCI/wms.aspx The reference systems offered by this service are: — For geographical coordinates: CRS: 84, EPSG:4230 (ED50), EPSG:4326 (WGS 84), EPSG:4258 (ETRS 89). — For U.T.M coordinates: EPSG:32627 (WGS 84/UTM zone 27N) EPSG:32628 (WGS 84/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:32629 (WGS 84/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:32630 (WGS 84/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:32631 (WGS 84/UTM zone 31N), EPSG:25828 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:25829 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:25830 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:25831 (ETRS 89/UTM zone 31N), EPSG:23028 (ED50/UTM zone 28N), EPSG:23029 (ED50/UTM zone 29N), EPSG:23030 (ED50/UTM zone 30N), EPSG:23031 (ED50/UTM zone 31N), EPSG 3857 (WGS84/Web Mercator)
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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Land for the passage or stay of Travellers. A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas.
Web Map Service maintained by NatureScot to publish GIS data related to the Peatland ACTION project
Municipalities concerned by at least one risk prevention plan (natural or technological) in the department of Meuse on 1 February 2019: or by a plan for the prevention of natural hazards (PPRN) created by the law of 2 February 1995, which is now one of the essential instruments of the State’s action to prevent natural hazards, in order to reduce the vulnerability of people and property. — or by a mining risk prevention plan (PPRM) created by Decree No. 2000-547 of 16 June 2000 — either by a technological risk prevention plan (PPRT) created by Law No 2003-699 of 30 July 2003 as part of the risk control policy on territories hosting high-risk industrial sites, sites subject to the authorisation regime with easements (AS), corresponding to the European ‘Seveso high threshold’ regime.
Area exposed to one or more hazards represented on the map of hazards used for the analysis of the industrial zone of Vazzio in the municipality of Ajaccio. The hazard map is the result of the hydraulic study carried out by HYDROPRAXIS on behalf of EDF PEI in October 2018 which assessed the flood risk of this area, which will host the new thermal power plant. The evaluation method is specific to each hazard type. It leads to the delimitation of a set of areas on the study perimeter constituting a zoning graduated according to the level of the hazard. The allocation of a hazard level at a given point in the territory takes into account the probability of occurrence of the dangerous phenomenon and its degree of intensity. All hazard areas shown on the hazard map are included. Areas protected by protective structures must be represented (possibly in a specific way) as they are always considered subject to hazard (case of breakage or inadequacy of the structure). Hazard zones can be described as developed data to the extent that they result from a synthesis using multiple sources of calculated, modelled or observed hazard data. These source data are not concerned by this class of objects but by another standard dealing with the knowledge of hazards.
The perimeter of an SCoT must be equal to that of one or more EPCI. Following the entry into force of the SDCI on 01/01/2017, the scope of SCoTs has automatically been reduced or extended in the light of the new EPCI perimeters. The municipalities impacted by these developments are considered “white zones” pending the revision of the new host SCoT. The scope of the procedure (SCoT approved, adopted, ongoing, under revision or lapsed) is therefore not the same as that of the active SCoT (colour or white zone), hence the need to have 2 tables: L_SCoT_2017_Proced.shp and L_SCoT_2017_Styl.shp. Update: April 2017
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Land for the passage or stay of Travellers A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas. Land can be carried out by one or more communal or intercommunal authorities which are identified in the N_REL_TERRAIN_GV_MO_ddd relation table. These data are also related to the #1367 table using the ID_SDAGV field to identify the prescribing SDAGV.
Public Service Houses are multi-purpose reception centres responsible for hosting, guiding and assisting users in their relations with administrations and public bodies.
This interactive web map service (WMS) contains a suite of Scottish Forestry open data layers (please see the Associated Resources list below). The layers can be switched on and off independently of each other. Scottish Forestry would like to thank NatureScot for their co-operation in hosting this web service on behalf of SF. PLEASE NOTE: In order to upload this Web Map Service into desktop GIS (eg. ESRI's ArcGIS), copy and paste the 'OnLine Resource' URL shown below up to, and including the '?'. ie:- https://ogc.nature.scot/geoserver/scottishforestry/ows?service=WMS&request=GetCapabilities
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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N_TERRAIN_GENS_VOYAGE_S_019 A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas.
OGC compliant data service containing layers about various administrative boundaries.
Web Mapping Service containing data related to Priority Marine Features (PMF), MPA Search features (Black guillemot or Large-scale feature of functional significance), and Annex I features used to underpin the selection and management of Marine Protected Areas and the wider marine environment.
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Description of the INSPIRE Download Service (predefined Atom): Development plan "Wirt Teil II" of the city of Diez - The link(s) for downloading the data sets is/are dynamically generated from Get Map calls to a WMS interface
MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
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The mapsearch-bku03232018 extension enhances CKAN by adding a web map interface to facilitate geographical queries. This allows users to search for datasets based on location, providing a visual and intuitive way to discover geographically relevant data within a CKAN instance. Aimed at CKAN v2.3, the extension integrates directly with the CKAN platform, offering geospatial search capabilities via a map-based interface. Key Features: Web Map Interface: Provides an interactive web map for specifying geographical search areas, making geospatial data discovery more user-friendly. Geographical Queries: Allows users to perform searches for datasets based on their geographical location, enabling targeted data retrieval. Configurable Test Environment: Includes configurable test files (test.ini and tests_config.cfg) to ensure proper functioning within specific CKAN environments. The settings include configurations for the CKAN host, Web Map Service URL, map search path, and CKAN API path. Technical Integration: The extension integrates into CKAN by providing a web map interface and processing geographical search queries. The tests_config.cfg file indicates that URL paths for the web map service and the CKAN API can be customized, suggesting the extension uses CKAN's API to perform search queries and relies on an external Web Map Service for rendering the map. Configuration files are required to set the CKAN host, WMS URL, MapSearch path and CKAN API path so the extension can use the CKAN API. Benefits & Impact: The mapsearch-bku03232018 extension improves the usability of CKAN for users interested in geographically referenced data by facilitating location-based searching. This enhancement should make the discovery of relevant datasets more efficient.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy.A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Departmental Traveller Welcome Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers.The areas included in the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy.A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Departmental Traveller Welcome Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers.The areas included in the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas.
This web map service (WMS) is the 25m raster version of the Land Cover Map 2015 (LCM2015) for Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It shows the target habitat class with the highest percentage cover in each 25m x 25m pixel. The 21 target classes are based on the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC) Broad Habitats, which encompass the entire range of UK habitats.The 25m raster web map service is the most detailed of the LCM2015 raster products, both thematically and spatially, and it is derived from the LCM2015 vector product. For LCM2015 per-pixel classifications were conducted, using a random forest classification algorithm. The resultant classifications were then mosaicked together, with the best classifications taking priority. This produced a per-pixel classification of the UK, which was then 'imported' into the spatial framework, recording a number of attributes, including the majority class per polygon which is the Land Cover class for each polygon.Find out more about Land Cover Map 2015 at ceh.ac.uk.LCM2015 is available for download to Catchment Based Approach (CaBA) Partnerships in the desktop GIS data package. Please contact your CaBA catchment host for further information.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Land for the passage or stay of Travellers A Traveller’s Land is a generic designation of any land permanently or intermittently developed for the passage or stay of Travellers. The common characteristic of such land is to be constructed and managed by a community which may be either a commune, a group of municipalities or an intercommunity. Some of them benefit from a State subsidy. A Traveller’s Welcome Land may be included in the Travellers’ Departmental Hospitality Scheme (this is the case for reception areas and large passage areas) or not (this is the case for small crossing areas and family rental grounds). There are municipalities that have set up a reception area for Travellers outside the departmental schemes. Reception areas, large passageways and small passageways and family rental grounds are the four types of land representative of the public action for the reception of Travellers. Areas covered by the SDAGV are assisted by the State by prefectural decree. This assistance may be supplemented by grants from the region, the department and the family allowance funds. The State’s financial contribution relates to investments necessary for the development and rehabilitation of permanent reception areas up to 70 % of the expenditure incurred within two years of publication of the scheme. State aid for the management of host areas may complement investment aid. Similarly, the law authorises the participation of the department up to a maximum of 25 % of the operating costs of the areas. Land can be carried out by one or more communal or intercommunal authorities which are identified in the N_REL_TERRAIN_GV_MO_ddd relation table. These data are also related to the #1367 table using the ID_SDAGV field to identify the prescribing SDAGV.