17 datasets found
  1. d

    Minimum Flows - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Feb 2, 2022
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    (2022). Minimum Flows - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/minimum-flows4
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 2, 2022
    Description

    Many resource consents contain a condition limiting the taking of water when a river or waterway is on restriction. A minimum flow means the flow at which abstractions from a water body must cease other than for an individual’s reasonable domestic needs, the reasonable needs of individuals and animals for drinking water, and for firefighting. Intended Use The minimum flow sites layer is intended to show the location of the monitoring sites associated with maintaining minimum flows for consent condition purposes. Attribute Information Monitoring Site information SiteID – Unique identification number for this site in Environment Canterbury database systemsWaterway – name of the water feature that this site relates to for residual flow purposesLocation – name for the location that the monitoring is undertakenRestrictionType – type of restriction (in this case Minimum Flow restriction) that this site is used for monitoring.ReferenceSystem – Environment Canterbury data management system that the monitoring site information is being managed withinReferenceNo – Internal ID for this site within the listed reference data management systemSiteAccount – Internal account for monitoring site.GroupAccount – Monitoring group.QARCode – Quality assurance code that describes the spatial accuracy of the site information. 1 = Differential GPS (advanced) or Geodetic Land Survey (1 - 2m); 2 = Standard handheld GPS (2 - 15m); 3 = Site visit (10 - 50m); 4 = Old Grid reference ±100m, no location sketch, or location not checked (50 - 300m); 5 = Proposed Location, should be within 50m (< 50m)Altitude – Approximate altitude of the monitoring site (above mean sea level) relative to the datum listed in the AltitudeDatum field. Values where the data is missing or displays 0 represent sites where that information is not available.AltitudeDatum – The vertical datum that the listed altitude value was recorded using. See https://www.linz.govt.nz/data/geodetic-system/datums-projections-and-heights/vertical-datums for more information about the vertical datums commonly used in New Zealand.IsActive – Current status on whether a site is being used for residual flow monitoring. Records with this value set to No are not currently part of residual flow monitoring for consents.CatchmentNo – unique identification number for the hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. See https://opendata.canterburymaps.govt.nz/datasets/catchment-boundaries/explore for more details.CatchmentDesc – name used for hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. Typically this is the name of water body that that the catchment area represents. GIS Attributes Spatial IDs: OBJECTID Spatial Fields: SHAPE, NZTMX & NZTMY – Approximate location of monitoring site in New Zealand Transverse Mercator coordinates. LowFlowSource – Environment Canterbury data management system that the low flow site information is being managed within.

  2. d

    Stormwater Abandoned Manhole Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    (2024). Stormwater Abandoned Manhole Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/stormwater-abandoned-manhole-hamilton-city-council2
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Hamilton, Hamilton City
    Description

    This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.

  3. d

    Stormwater Dataset - Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    (2024). Stormwater Dataset - Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/stormwater-dataset-hamilton-city-council2
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Hamilton, Hamilton City
    Description

    This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.

  4. c

    Data from: Residual Flows

    • opendata.canterburymaps.govt.nz
    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    • +2more
    Updated Sep 1, 2016
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    Canterbury Regional Council (2016). Residual Flows [Dataset]. https://opendata.canterburymaps.govt.nz/datasets/residual-flows/api
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 1, 2016
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Canterbury Regional Council
    Area covered
    Description

    Many resource consents contain a condition limiting the taking of water when a river or waterway is on restriction.A residual flow applies to specific consents that take water from a tributary of a main river. A residual flow recognises that a tributary stream often has different flow characteristics from the main river stem. It is set at the point of take on a case-by-case basis, to provide for the aquatic ecosystems and natural character of the source water body. Intended Use The residual flow sites layer is intended to show the location of the monitoring sites associated with maintaining residual flows. Attribute Information Monitoring Site informationSiteID – Unique identification number for this site in Environment Canterbury database systems Waterway – name of the water feature that this site relates to for residual flow purposes Location – name for the location that the monitoring is undertaken RestrictionType – type of restriction (in this case Residual Flow restriction) that this site is used for monitoring. ReferenceSystem – Environment Canterbury data management system that the monitoring site information is being managed within.ReferenceNo – Internal ID for this site within the listed reference data management system SiteAccount – Internal account for monitoring site. GroupAccount – Monitoring group. QARCode – Quality assurance code that describes the spatial accuracy of the site information. 1 = Differential GPS (advanced) or Geodetic Land Survey (1 - 2m); 2 = Standard handheld GPS (2 - 15m); 3 = Site visit (10 - 50m); 4 = Old Grid reference ±100m, no location sketch, or location not checked (50 - 300m); 5 = Proposed Location, should be within 50m (< 50m) Altitude – Approximate altitude of the monitoring site (above mean sea level) relative to the datum listed in the AltitudeDatum field. Values where the data is missing or displays 0 represent sites where that information is not available. AltitudeDatum – The vertical datum that the listed altitude value was recorded using. See https://www.linz.govt.nz/data/geodetic-system/datums-projections-and-heights/vertical-datums for more information about the vertical datums commonly used in New Zealand.IsActive – Current status on whether a site is being used for residual flow monitoring. Records with this value set to No are not currently part of residual flow monitoring for consents. CatchmentNo – unique identification number for the hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. See https://opendata.canterburymaps.govt.nz/datasets/catchment-boundaries/explore for more details. CatchmentDesc – name used for hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. Typically this is the name of water body that that the catchment area represents. GIS AttributesSpatial IDs: OBJECTIDSpatial Fields: SHAPE, NZTMX & NZTMY – Approximate location of monitoring site in New Zealand Transverse Mercator coordinatesLowFlowSource – Environment Canterbury data management system that the low flow site information is being managed within.

  5. F

    Wake Words & Voice Commands Speech Data: English (New Zealand)

    • futurebeeai.com
    wav
    Updated Aug 1, 2022
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    FutureBee AI (2022). Wake Words & Voice Commands Speech Data: English (New Zealand) [Dataset]. https://www.futurebeeai.com/dataset/wake-words-and-commands-dataset/wake-words-and-commands-english-newzealand
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    wavAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 1, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    FutureBeeAI
    Authors
    FutureBee AI
    License

    https://www.futurebeeai.com/data-license-agreementhttps://www.futurebeeai.com/data-license-agreement

    Area covered
    New Zealand
    Dataset funded by
    FutureBeeAI
    Description

    Introduction

    Welcome to the New Zealand English Wake Word & Command Dataset, meticulously designed to advance the development and accuracy of voice-activated systems. This dataset features an extensive collection of wake words and commands, essential for triggering and interacting with voice assistants and other voice-activated devices. Our dataset ensures these systems respond promptly and accurately to user inputs, enhancing their reliability and user experience.

    Speech Data

    This training dataset comprises over 20,000 audio recordings of wake words and command phrases designed to build robust and accurate voice assistant speech technology. Each participant recorded 400 recordings in diverse environments and at varying speeds. This dataset contains audio recordings of wake words, as well as wake words followed by commands.

    Participant Diversity:
    Speakers: 50 native New Zealand English speakers from the FutureBeeAI Community.
    Regions: Various states/provinces of New Zealand, ensuring a balanced representation of accents, dialects, and demographics.
    Profile: Participants range from 18 to 70 years old, with a gender ratio of 60% male and 40% female.
    Recording Details:
    Nature: Scripted audio recordings of wake words and command phrases.
    Duration: Average of 1 to 15 seconds per recording.
    Formats: WAV format with stereo channels, 16-bit depth, and sample rates from 16 to 48 kHz.

    Dataset Diversity

    This dataset includes recordings of various types of wake words and commands, in different environments and at different speeds, making it highly diverse.

    Different Types of Wake Words:
    Automobile Wake words: Hey Mercedes, Hey BMW, Hey Porsche, Hey Volvo, Hey Audi, Hi Genesis, Hey Mini, Hey Toyota, Ok ford, Hey Hyundai, Ok Honda, Hello Kia, Hey Dodge, etc
    Voice Assistant Wake Words: Hey Siri, Ok google, Alexa, Hey Cartana, Hi Bixby, Hey Celia, Hey Google, etc
    Home Appliences Wake Words: Hi LG, Ok LG, Hello Lloyd, etc
    Different Types of Voice Commands: Depending on application and use case the dataset contains various types of commands like
    Automobile: Playing Music, Checking for Direction, Integrating with at-home devices, Booking appointment, Voice Search, Voice Ordering, Providing feedback, and more
    Voice Assistant: Asking general question, defination, translation, explanation, Asking for trivia or fun facts, Playing Music, Make a call, Controlling at-home devices, Checking direction, nearby places and traffic condition, Shopping, Calender, Reminder and To-do list, and many more
    Home Appliences: Controlling Appliences, Checking Appliences Status, Setting up reminders or alarms, To-do list and shopping lists, and many more
    Different Recording Environment:
    Without any background noise or echo
    Background traffic noise
    Background people talking
    Different Recording Pace
    Normal speaking speed
    Fast speaking speed

    This extensive coverage ensures the dataset includes realistic scenarios, which is essential for developing effective voice assistant speech recognition models.

    Metadata

    The dataset provides comprehensive metadata for each audio recording and participant:

    Participant Metadata: Unique identifier, age, gender, country, state, district, accent and dialect.
    Other Metadata: Recording transcript, Recording environment, Recording pace, device details, sample rate, bit depth, file format, etc.

  6. d

    Zones - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 5, 2024
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    (2024). Zones - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/zones-2024-operative-district-plan
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 5, 2024
    Description

    Intended Purpose:A polygon dataset of Zones created for the Wellington City Council District Plan as part of the District Plan Review Process. A zone spatially identifies and manages an area with common environmental characteristics or where environmental outcomes are sought, by bundling compatible activities or effects together, and controlling those that are incompatible. Large Lot Residential Zone (LLRZ): Areas used predominantly for residential activities and buildings such as detached houses on lots larger than those of the Low density residential and General residential zones, and where there are particular landscape characteristics, physical limitations or other constraints to more intensive development. High Density Residential Zone (HRZ): These areas are used predominantly for residential activities with a high concentration and bulk of buildings and other compatible activities. Medium Density Residential Zone (MRZ): Areas used predominantly for residential activities with moderate concentration and bulk of buildings, such as detached, semi-detached and terraced housing, low-rise apartments, and other compatible activities. General Rural Zone (GRZ): Areas used predominantly for primary production activities, including intensive indoor primary production. The zone may also be used for a range of activities that support primary production activities, including associated rural industry, and other activities that require a rural location. Neighbourhood Centre Zone (NCZ): Areas used predominantly for small-scale commercial and community activities that service the needs of the immediate residential neighbourhood. Local Centre Zone (LCZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of commercial and community activities that service the needs of the residential catchment. Commercial Zone (COMZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of commercial and community activities. Mixed Use Zone (MUZ): Areas used predominantly for a compatible mixture of residential, commercial, light industrial, recreational and/or community activities. Metropolitan Centre Zone (MCZ): Areas used predominantly for a broad range of commercial, community, recreational and residential activities. The zone is a focal point for sub-regional urban catchments. City Centre Zone (CCZ): Areas used predominantly for a broad range of commercial, community, recreational and residential activities. The zone is the main centre for the district or region. General Industrial Zone (GIZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of industrial activities. The zone may also be used for activities that are compatible with the adverse effects generated from industrial activities. Natural Open Space Zone (NOSZ): Areas where the natural environment is retained and activities, buildings and other structures are compatible with the characteristics of the zone. Open Space Zone (OSZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of passive and active recreational activities, along with limited associated facilities and structures. Sport and Active Recreation Zone (SARZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of indoor and outdoor sport and active recreation. Special Purpose Zone: Special purpose zones comprise several zones, within which a specialist activity is undertaken. The proposed District Plan for Wellington City has the following special purpose zones: Airport Zone (AIRPZ): The purpose of the Airport Zone is to provide for the ongoing management and development of Wellington International Airport. Corrections Zone (CORZ): Ara Poutama Aotearoa, the Department of Corrections operates a custodial prison facility for women located at 13 Main Road, Tawa, known as Arohata Prison. Ara Poutama Aotearoa, the Department of Corrections is responsible for the operational management of the prison.Future Urban Zone (FUZ): The purpose of the Future Urban Zone is to identify greenfield land that is suitable for urban development. The Future Urban Zone is used for land that is not ready for a residential, open space, centres or industrial zoning but has been identified for future urban use. Hospital Zone (HOSZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Hospital Zone is to enable the efficient and effective operation and development of the Wellington Regional Hospital (Ngā Puna Wai ora) located in Newtown. Port Zone (PORTZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Port zone is to enable the port to operate efficiently and effectively as a locally, regionally, and nationally significant shipping and passenger port and freight intermodal hub, while managing effects on the amenity of surrounding zones so that adverse effects are mitigated as far as practicable, and people’s health and safety is maintained. Quarry Zone (QUARZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Quarry Zone is to enable the continued use and operation of Wellington’s large-scale quarries. Stadium Zone (STADZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Stadium zone is to enable the continuing use, operation, and development of the Wellington Regional Stadium in a way that provides for its role as a multi-purpose stadium facility catering to a wide range of sporting, entertainment, education, cultural, and conference functions and events. Tertiary Education Zone (TEDZ): The Special Purpose Tertiary Education Zone applies to Victoria University’s Kelburn campus and Massey University’s Mount Cook campus. The purpose of the zone is to enable the efficient and effective operation and development of these tertiary education facilities across both campus sites. Waterfront Zone (WFZ): The Waterfront Zone provides an interface between the city centre and Te Whanganui a Tara. It contains one of the city’s primary promenades along with two major parks: Frank Kitts Park and Waitangi Park. Wellington Town Belt Zone (WTBZ): The Town Belt is a large area of open space providing a scenic backdrop to the inner city and offering recreational opportunities to residents and visitors. Abbreviations/Acronyms:ePlan - "Electronic Plan" the web version of the District PlanPDP - Proposed District PlanIHP - Independent Hearings PanelWCC - Wellington City Council Refresh Rate (Data only):StaticOwnership:This data is owned by WCC District Planning Team, contact District.Plan@wcc.govt.nz for questions about this layer and its appropriate use cases. Ownership specifies legal or administrative control over the content. Stewardship: This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Custodianship: This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Stewardship addresses the ongoing care, maintenance, and management of the content. Authoritative Data Sources (Data only): This data has been prepared based on the WCC District Plan Review Process. Summary of Data Collection (Data only): The purpose of a Zone is to spatially identify and manage an area with common environmental characteristics or where environmental outcomes are sought, by bundling compatible activities or effects together, and controlling those that are incompatible. District Plan Zones were modified from the Proposed District Plan as part of the WCC District Plan Review Process.

  7. d

    Horokiwi Area - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset - data.govt.nz -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Dec 3, 2024
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    (2024). Horokiwi Area - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/horokiwi-area-2024-operative-district-plan
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 3, 2024
    Area covered
    Horokiwi
    Description

    Intended Purpose:A polygon dataset of Specific Controls created for the Wellington City Council District Plan as part of the District Plan Review Process. Specific control refers to a site or area which has provisions that are different from other spatial layers or district-wide provisions that apply to that site or area. This layer contains spatial definitions for the following specific controls: Active FrontagesAreas of Change (Special Purpose Waterfront Zone)Curtis Street Building Setback ControlsHorokiwi Area Lyall Bay Parade Frontage ControlMinimum Sunlight Access - Public Space RequirementsNon-Residential Activity Frontages Old St Paul's - Adjoining Building Control Public Open Space (Special Purpose Waterfront Zone)Tapu Te Ranga SiteVerandah Controls Abbreviations/Acronyms:ePlan - "Electronic Plan" the web version of the District PlanPDP - Proposed District PlanIHP - Independent Hearings PanelWCC - Wellington City Council Refresh Rate (Data only):Static Ownership:This data is owned by WCC District Planning Team, contact District.Plan@wcc.govt.nz for questions about this layer and its appropriate use cases. Ownership specifies legal or administrative control over the content. Stewardship:This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Custodianship:This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Stewardship addresses the ongoing care, maintenance, and management of the content.Authoritative Data Sources (Data only):This data has been prepared based on the WCC District Plan Review Process.Summary of Data Collection (Data only):Specific control refers to a site or area which has provisions that are different from other spatial layers or district-wide provisions that apply to that site or area. The specific control boundaries in PDP was created by the WCC District Plan team following the National Planning Standard (https://environment.govt.nz/publications/national-planning-standards/). The specific control boundaries were subsequently modified as part of the District Plan Review Process.

  8. g

    Data from: Enhancing Australian Foundation Spatial Data Framework to support...

    • ecat.ga.gov.au
    Updated Jun 18, 2021
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    (2021). Enhancing Australian Foundation Spatial Data Framework to support Australia’s future [Dataset]. https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/search?keyword=NLI
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 18, 2021
    Area covered
    Australia
    Description

    The Foundation Spatial Data Framework (FSDF) is a framework of ten national authoritative geographic data themes that supports evidence-based social-economic decision making across multiple levels of Australian and New Zealand government agencies, industry, research and the community. The AAA data management principles (Authoritative, Accurate and Accessible), articulated for FSDF, are easily translatable to the FAIR Principles and applied to ensure: - Ability to Find data through rich and consistently implemented metadata; - Access to metadata and data by humans and machines while practicing federated data management within trusted data repositories; - Interoperability of metadata and data through adoption of common standards and application of best practices; and - Reusability of data by capturing licencing constraints and information about its quality and provenance. The Location Information Knowledge Platform (LINK) was developed in 2016 as a digital catalogue of FSDF content. This governed, online, dynamic, analysis and discovery tool was designed to enhance the discovery of FSDF datasets, support work planning and indicate the legal frameworks, agency priorities and use case associated with FSDF data. More than 73 Australian government agencies and commercial organisations use this Platform. Current work includes: - Building common high-level and individual lower-level information models (ontologies) for the FSDF and each dataset; - Development of a new architecture for persistent identifiers and identifier incorporation in the datasets; - The ISO 19115-1-based Australian and New Zealand Metadata profile and best practices user guides; and - Testing new workflows for metadata and data governance and integration utilising a set of common cloud-based infrastructure. On realisation, the FSDF will become a necessary component of spatial socio-economic decision making across Australian and New Zealand government agencies and the private sector. FSDF will encourage cross-sector partnerships and enable seamless access to authoritative spatial data across organisational and jurisdictional boundaries, thus contributing to economic growth, improved public safety, meeting legal and policy obligations and sustaining business needs.

  9. d

    ISSP2004: Citizenship I - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 19, 2015
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    (2015). ISSP2004: Citizenship I - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/oai-figshare-com-article-2000952
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2015
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The fourteenth of 20 years of International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) surveys in New Zealand by Professor Philip Gendall, Department of Marketing, Massey University.A verbose rundown on topics covered follows.Qualities of a good citizen; attitude toward the right of public meetings for religious extremists, people who want to overthrow the government by force, or people prejudiced against any racial or ethnic group; social and political participation; memberships; importance of different people’s rights in democracy (scale); estimation of political influence possibilities (political efficacy); likeliness of counter-action against an unjust law and expected chance of serious attention to people’s demand.Interest in politics; personal trust in politicians and people; political discussions with friends; opinion leadership in politics; national sovereignty and attitude to international organisations; attitude to the action of political parties; real policy choice between parties; attitude toward a referendum; level of honesty and fairness in the last national election; commitment to serve people and likeliness to correct own mistakes in public service; corruption in public service; functioning of democracy at present, in the past and in the future; frequencies of media use; respect for people and tolerance in case of disagreement; self-description of the habitation (residence); voter participation; voting behaviour (recall).Demography: Sex; age; marital-status; steady life-partner; education; current employment status; hours worked weekly; occupation (ISCO 1988); working for private or public sector or self-employed; if self-employed: number of employees; supervisor function; trade union membership; current employment status (ISCO 1988); earnings; family income; household size; household composition; party affiliation; participation in last election; religious denomination; attendance of religious services; self-placement on a top-bottom scale; region; size of community; type of community: urban-rural area; ethnicity, nationality and family-origin. Additionally coded: Administrative mode of data collection.

  10. d

    Stormwater Subsoil Drain Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    (2024). Stormwater Subsoil Drain Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/stormwater-subsoil-drain-hamilton-city-council2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Hamilton, Hamilton City
    Description

    This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.

  11. d

    Zoning of Legal Roads - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 5, 2024
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    (2024). Zoning of Legal Roads - 2024 Operative District Plan - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/zoning-of-legal-roads-2024-operative-district-plan
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 5, 2024
    Description

    Intended Purpose:A polygon dataset of Zones created for the Wellington City Council District Plan as part of the District Plan Review Process. A zone spatially identifies and manages an area with common environmental characteristics or where environmental outcomes are sought, by bundling compatible activities or effects together, and controlling those that are incompatible. Large Lot Residential Zone (LLRZ): Areas used predominantly for residential activities and buildings such as detached houses on lots larger than those of the Low density residential and General residential zones, and where there are particular landscape characteristics, physical limitations or other constraints to more intensive development. High Density Residential Zone (HRZ): These areas are used predominantly for residential activities with a high concentration and bulk of buildings and other compatible activities. Medium Density Residential Zone (MRZ): Areas used predominantly for residential activities with moderate concentration and bulk of buildings, such as detached, semi-detached and terraced housing, low-rise apartments, and other compatible activities. General Rural Zone (GRZ): Areas used predominantly for primary production activities, including intensive indoor primary production. The zone may also be used for a range of activities that support primary production activities, including associated rural industry, and other activities that require a rural location. Neighbourhood Centre Zone (NCZ): Areas used predominantly for small-scale commercial and community activities that service the needs of the immediate residential neighbourhood. Local Centre Zone (LCZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of commercial and community activities that service the needs of the residential catchment. Commercial Zone (COMZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of commercial and community activities. Mixed Use Zone (MUZ): Areas used predominantly for a compatible mixture of residential, commercial, light industrial, recreational and/or community activities. Metropolitan Centre Zone (MCZ): Areas used predominantly for a broad range of commercial, community, recreational and residential activities. The zone is a focal point for sub-regional urban catchments. City Centre Zone (CCZ): Areas used predominantly for a broad range of commercial, community, recreational and residential activities. The zone is the main centre for the district or region. General Industrial Zone (GIZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of industrial activities. The zone may also be used for activities that are compatible with the adverse effects generated from industrial activities. Natural Open Space Zone (NOSZ): Areas where the natural environment is retained and activities, buildings and other structures are compatible with the characteristics of the zone. Open Space Zone (OSZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of passive and active recreational activities, along with limited associated facilities and structures. Sport and Active Recreation Zone (SARZ): Areas used predominantly for a range of indoor and outdoor sport and active recreation. Special Purpose Zone: Special purpose zones comprise several zones, within which a specialist activity is undertaken. The proposed District Plan for Wellington City has the following special purpose zones: Airport Zone (AIRPZ): The purpose of the Airport Zone is to provide for the ongoing management and development of Wellington International Airport. Corrections Zone (CORZ): Ara Poutama Aotearoa, the Department of Corrections operates a custodial prison facility for women located at 13 Main Road, Tawa, known as Arohata Prison. Ara Poutama Aotearoa, the Department of Corrections is responsible for the operational management of the prison.Future Urban Zone (FUZ): The purpose of the Future Urban Zone is to identify greenfield land that is suitable for urban development. The Future Urban Zone is used for land that is not ready for a residential, open space, centres or industrial zoning but has been identified for future urban use. Hospital Zone (HOSZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Hospital Zone is to enable the efficient and effective operation and development of the Wellington Regional Hospital (Ngā Puna Wai ora) located in Newtown. Port Zone (PORTZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Port zone is to enable the port to operate efficiently and effectively as a locally, regionally, and nationally significant shipping and passenger port and freight intermodal hub, while managing effects on the amenity of surrounding zones so that adverse effects are mitigated as far as practicable, and people’s health and safety is maintained. Quarry Zone (QUARZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Quarry Zone is to enable the continued use and operation of Wellington’s large-scale quarries. Stadium Zone (STADZ): The purpose of the Special Purpose Stadium zone is to enable the continuing use, operation, and development of the Wellington Regional Stadium in a way that provides for its role as a multi-purpose stadium facility catering to a wide range of sporting, entertainment, education, cultural, and conference functions and events. Tertiary Education Zone (TEDZ): The Special Purpose Tertiary Education Zone applies to Victoria University’s Kelburn campus and Massey University’s Mount Cook campus. The purpose of the zone is to enable the efficient and effective operation and development of these tertiary education facilities across both campus sites. Waterfront Zone (WFZ): The Waterfront Zone provides an interface between the city centre and Te Whanganui a Tara. It contains one of the city’s primary promenades along with two major parks: Frank Kitts Park and Waitangi Park. Wellington Town Belt Zone (WTBZ): The Town Belt is a large area of open space providing a scenic backdrop to the inner city and offering recreational opportunities to residents and visitors. Abbreviations/Acronyms:ePlan - "Electronic Plan" the web version of the District PlanPDP - Proposed District PlanIHP - Independent Hearings PanelWCC - Wellington City Council Refresh Rate (Data only):StaticOwnership:This data is owned by WCC District Planning Team, contact District.Plan@wcc.govt.nz for questions about this layer and its appropriate use cases. Ownership specifies legal or administrative control over the content. Stewardship: This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Custodianship: This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Stewardship addresses the ongoing care, maintenance, and management of the content. Authoritative Data Sources (Data only): This data has been prepared based on the WCC District Plan Review Process. Summary of Data Collection (Data only): The purpose of a Zone is to spatially identify and manage an area with common environmental characteristics or where environmental outcomes are sought, by bundling compatible activities or effects together, and controlling those that are incompatible. District Plan Zones were modified from the Proposed District Plan as part of the WCC District Plan Review Process.

  12. d

    Stormwater Soakage Trench Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    (2024). Stormwater Soakage Trench Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/stormwater-soakage-trench-hamilton-city-council2
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Hamilton, Hamilton City
    Description

    This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.

  13. d

    Stormwater Catchpit Lead Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz -...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Jan 31, 2024
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    (2024). Stormwater Catchpit Lead Hamilton City Council - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/stormwater-catchpit-lead-hamilton-city-council2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 31, 2024
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Hamilton, Hamilton City
    Description

    This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.

  14. d

    ISSP2017: Social Networks III - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Apr 22, 2007
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    (2007). ISSP2017: Social Networks III - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/oai-figshare-com-article-5405554
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 22, 2007
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The third International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) survey by COMPASS Research Centre at the University of Auckland.A verbose rundown on topics covered follows.Social relations and social networks. Number of adult brothers and sisters; frequency of personal (visits, meetings) and non-personal contacts (telephone, letter, fax or email) with the parents, brothers and sisters and own children; time for the journey to where the mother lives, frequency of the contacts to relatives (uncles and aunts, cousins, parents-in-law, brothers-in-law or sisters-in-law, nieces and nephews, godparents); number of close friends at work place, in the neighbourhood, and in general; sex of best close friend; frequency of contact to the best friend; participation in activities of groups like sports club, charitable organisation, neighbourhood, political party, an association, and a church or religious organisation.First and second contact person for support in respondent's household, at money problems and in case of a depression; frequency of helping others in household, by loaning money, by talking to depressed persons and in giving help at job search; information source at the search for the present job; importance of character traits of close friends: Intelligence, helpfulness, understanding and enjoyable company (scale); attitude to the moral obligation of adult children to care for their parents; people who are better off should help friends who are less well off; attitude to development of friendships to once own advantage; attitude to a state responsibility to provide the childcare and an adequate standard of living for old people; personal luck assessment; feeling of being overused by family, relatives or friends; trust in neighbours (scale); duration of living at the place of residence; political efficacy; frequency of political discussions with friends.Demography: sex; age; marital-status; education; current employment status; hours worked weekly; occupation; working for private or public sector or self-employed; if self-employed: number of employees; supervisor function; trade union membership; current employment status; earnings; family income; household size; religious denomination; attendance of religious services; size of community; type of community: urban-rural area; ethnicity.

  15. d

    ISSP2007: Leisure Time and Sports I - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Nov 29, 2009
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    (2009). ISSP2007: Leisure Time and Sports I - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/oai-figshare-com-article-2000961
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 29, 2009
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The 17th of 20 years of International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) surveys within New Zealand by Professor Philip Gendall, Department of Marketing, Massey University.A verbose rundown on topics covered follows.Leisure time: activities and satisfaction. The meaning of time and leisure, and its relation to work and other spheres of life. Sport/game activities and subjective functions of sport and games. Sociological aspects of sports. Social and political participation. Social determinants and consequences of leisure.Frequency of leisure activities in respondent’s free time; main purpose of free time activities; enjoyment from reading books, getting together with friends, taking part in physical activities, and watching TV or DVDs; motivation for leisure time activities: establishing useful contacts, relaxing, and developing skills in free time.Frequency of feeling bored, feeling rushed, and thinking about work during free time; preference for sharing time with other people or being alone; wishes for: more time in a paid job, more time doing household work, more time with family, and more time in leisure activities; number of nights the respondent stayed away from home for holiday or social visits; days of leave from work; most frequent exercises or physical activity.Preferred type of games rather than sports; most important reasons for taking part in sports or games: physical or mental health, meeting other people, competing against others or physical attractiveness; most frequently watched sport on TV; feeling of national pride when respondent’s country does well at international sports or games competition; attitudes towards sport (scale); social and political participation; trust in people; interest in politics; reasons for staying away from doing free time activities: lack of facilities nearby, lack of money and time, personal health or responsibility to take care of someone; perception of happiness; estimation of personal health. Whether the day before questioning was a working-day or a holiday; time of getting up and going to sleep on the day before; height and weight of respondent; wishes to gain or to lose weight; conception of an ideal shape of a man and a women on the bases of presented pictures.Demography: Sex; age; marital status; steady life partner; years of schooling; highest education level; country specific education and degree; current employment status (respondent and partner); hours worked weekly; occupation (ISCO 1988) (respondent and partner); supervising function at work; working for private or public sector or self-employed (respondent and partner); if self-employed: number of employees; trade union membership; earnings of respondent (country specific); family income (country specific); size of household; household composition; party affiliation (left-right); country specific party affiliation; participation in last election; religious denomination; religious main groups; attendance of religious services; self-placement on a top-bottom scale; region (country specific); size of community (country specific); type of community: urban-rural area; country of origin or ethnic group affiliation. Additionally coded: administrative mode of data-collection; weighting factor; case substitution.

  16. d

    South Island Pastoral Leases - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use...

    • catalogue.data.govt.nz
    Updated Sep 30, 2020
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    (2020). South Island Pastoral Leases - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/south-island-pastoral-leases1
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 30, 2020
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    New Zealand, Te Waipounamu / South Island
    Description

    This layer includes the current South Island pastoral leases as at the layer's latest revision date. It excludes pastoral leases that have completed Tenure Review, endowment land, special leases, pastoral occupation licences, pastoral vacant land and special leases. Lease boundaries have been derived from graphical cadastral line work held in LandOnline which in many cases was itself derived from the Lands and Survey Department's hard copy record sheets. The boundaries of many of these original Run Plans, on which these leases were based, were obtained from early Run Plans, circa 1860. As such please note that THE BOUNDARIES ARE INDICATIVE ONLY. More information on Pastoral Leases can be found under the Crown Pastoral Land section on the LINZ website

  17. Lyall Bay Parade Frontage Control - 2024 Operative District Plan

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data-wcc.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 4, 2024
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    Wellington City Council (2024). Lyall Bay Parade Frontage Control - 2024 Operative District Plan [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/057b6389cedc40f98f97c2e45fc6d41d
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 4, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Wellington City Councilhttps://wellington.govt.nz/
    Area covered
    Description

    Intended Purpose:A polygon dataset of Specific Controls created for the Wellington City Council District Plan as part of the District Plan Review Process. Specific control refers to a site or area which has provisions that are different from other spatial layers or district-wide provisions that apply to that site or area. This layer contains spatial definitions for the following specific controls: Active FrontagesAreas of Change (Special Purpose Waterfront Zone)Curtis Street Building Setback ControlsHorokiwi Area Lyall Bay Parade Frontage ControlMinimum Sunlight Access - Public Space RequirementsNon-Residential Activity Frontages Old St Paul's - Adjoining Building Control Public Open Space (Special Purpose Waterfront Zone)Tapu Te Ranga SiteVerandah Controls Abbreviations/Acronyms:ePlan - "Electronic Plan" the web version of the District PlanPDP - Proposed District PlanIHP - Independent Hearings PanelWCC - Wellington City Council Refresh Rate (Data only):Static Ownership:This data is owned by WCC District Planning Team, contact District.Plan@wcc.govt.nz for questions about this layer and its appropriate use cases. Ownership specifies legal or administrative control over the content. Stewardship:This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Custodianship:This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. Stewardship addresses the ongoing care, maintenance, and management of the content.Authoritative Data Sources (Data only):This data has been prepared based on the WCC District Plan Review Process.Summary of Data Collection (Data only):Specific control refers to a site or area which has provisions that are different from other spatial layers or district-wide provisions that apply to that site or area. The specific control boundaries in PDP was created by the WCC District Plan team following the National Planning Standard (https://environment.govt.nz/publications/national-planning-standards/). The specific control boundaries were subsequently modified as part of the District Plan Review Process.

  18. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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(2022). Minimum Flows - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data [Dataset]. https://catalogue.data.govt.nz/dataset/minimum-flows4

Minimum Flows - Dataset - data.govt.nz - discover and use data

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Dataset updated
Feb 2, 2022
Description

Many resource consents contain a condition limiting the taking of water when a river or waterway is on restriction. A minimum flow means the flow at which abstractions from a water body must cease other than for an individual’s reasonable domestic needs, the reasonable needs of individuals and animals for drinking water, and for firefighting. Intended Use The minimum flow sites layer is intended to show the location of the monitoring sites associated with maintaining minimum flows for consent condition purposes. Attribute Information Monitoring Site information SiteID – Unique identification number for this site in Environment Canterbury database systemsWaterway – name of the water feature that this site relates to for residual flow purposesLocation – name for the location that the monitoring is undertakenRestrictionType – type of restriction (in this case Minimum Flow restriction) that this site is used for monitoring.ReferenceSystem – Environment Canterbury data management system that the monitoring site information is being managed withinReferenceNo – Internal ID for this site within the listed reference data management systemSiteAccount – Internal account for monitoring site.GroupAccount – Monitoring group.QARCode – Quality assurance code that describes the spatial accuracy of the site information. 1 = Differential GPS (advanced) or Geodetic Land Survey (1 - 2m); 2 = Standard handheld GPS (2 - 15m); 3 = Site visit (10 - 50m); 4 = Old Grid reference ±100m, no location sketch, or location not checked (50 - 300m); 5 = Proposed Location, should be within 50m (< 50m)Altitude – Approximate altitude of the monitoring site (above mean sea level) relative to the datum listed in the AltitudeDatum field. Values where the data is missing or displays 0 represent sites where that information is not available.AltitudeDatum – The vertical datum that the listed altitude value was recorded using. See https://www.linz.govt.nz/data/geodetic-system/datums-projections-and-heights/vertical-datums for more information about the vertical datums commonly used in New Zealand.IsActive – Current status on whether a site is being used for residual flow monitoring. Records with this value set to No are not currently part of residual flow monitoring for consents.CatchmentNo – unique identification number for the hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. See https://opendata.canterburymaps.govt.nz/datasets/catchment-boundaries/explore for more details.CatchmentDesc – name used for hydrological catchment that the monitoring site lies within. Typically this is the name of water body that that the catchment area represents. GIS Attributes Spatial IDs: OBJECTID Spatial Fields: SHAPE, NZTMX & NZTMY – Approximate location of monitoring site in New Zealand Transverse Mercator coordinates. LowFlowSource – Environment Canterbury data management system that the low flow site information is being managed within.

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