Using this application, navigate to county either by typing the name in the search box or using the pan, zoom in and zoom out tools. Click on the county boundary to bring up the pop-up. Some details about the county appear in the pop-up as well as a links to the PDFs (Half-Inch Map, Quarter-Inch Map, Functional Classification Map). At the top, there is a link to a page that gives information about prices and how to place orders for paper maps. There is also a link to historic county maps. Maps are generated annually. More information about the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) can be found at the following URL: ksdot.org.
The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. County subdivisions are the primary divisions of counties and their equivalent entities for the reporting of Census Bureau data. They include legally- recognized minor civil divisions (MCDs) and statistical census county divisions (CCDs), and unorganized territories. For the 2010 Census, the MCDs are the primary governmental and/or administrative divisions of counties in 29 States and Puerto Rico; Tennessee changed from having CCDs for Census 2000 to having MCDs for the 2010 Census. In MCD States where no MCD exists or is not defined, the Census Bureau creates statistical unorganized territories to complete coverage. The entire area of the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas are covered by county subdivisions. The boundaries of most legal MCDs are as of January 1, 2019, as reported through the Census Bureau's Boundary and Annexation Survey (BAS). The boundaries of all CCDs, delineated in 20 states, are those as reported as part of the Census Bureau's Participant Statistical Areas Program (PSAP) for the 2010 Census.
This shows the boundaries for American Indian reservations, counties, tracts, block groups, blocks, military boundaries and political townships as of 2020. TIGER/Line shapefiles downloaded directly from the U.S. Census at 2020 TIGER/Line ShapefilesThe TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The primary legal divisions of most states are termed counties. In Louisiana, these divisions are known as parishes. In Alaska, which has no counties, the equivalent entities are the organized boroughs, city and boroughs, municipalities, and for the unorganized area, census areas. The latter are delineated cooperatively for statistical purposes by the State of Alaska and the Census Bureau. In four states (Maryland, Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia), there are one or more incorporated places that are independent of any county organization and thus constitute primary divisions of their states. These incorporated places are known as independent cities and are treated as equivalent entities for purposes of data presentation.The full Kansas geospatial catalog is administered by the Kansas Data Access & Support Center (DASC) and can be found at the following URL: https://hub.kansasgis.org/
The Kansas County Databases of the U.S. Public Land Survey System (PLSS) provide, for each of the 105 counties in Kansas, high quality digital representations of basic Kansas land divisions first established by the PLSS, primarily between the years of 1854 and 1877. They are derived from data contained in PLSS databases of the USGS 24K Digital Line Graph (DLG) series and data from the Kansas Cartographic Database (KCD) developed by the Kansas Geological Survey. All of the data is derived from USGS 7.5 minute quadrangles. Only minimal edge matching was performed between DLG databases. Features represented in the county databases include the basic point, line and area features established in the original Public Land Surveys of Kansas. Currently lacking from this collection is a complete representation of Indian land boundaries surveyed in Kansas as part of the original PLSS while those Indian lands were still excluded from the public lands. The data from the KCD was captured using in-house KGS software, GIMMAP (Geodata Interactive Management, Mapping and Production). Using Arc Macro Language (AML) files, DLG"s for individual quadrangles covering each county were imported into Arc/Info using the "dlgarc" command. The individual DLG"s were then merged and cleaned to form the county databases. This procedure was only possible after the original USGS DLG"s were reformatted to establish uniform numbers and sequences of attributes for all nodes, areas, and lines in the original USGS DLG"s.The full Kansas geospatial catalog is administered by the Kansas Data Access & Support Center (DASC) and can be found at the following URL: https://hub.kansasgis.org/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domainhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain
The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The primary legal divisions of most states are termed counties. In Louisiana, these divisions are known as parishes. In Alaska, which has no counties, the equivalent entities are the organized boroughs, city and boroughs, municipalities, and for the unorganized area, census areas. The latter are delineated cooperatively for statistical purposes by the State of Alaska and the Census Bureau. In four states (Maryland, Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia), there are one or more incorporated places that are independent of any county organization and thus constitute primary divisions of their states. These incorporated places are known as independent cities and are treated as equivalent entities for purposes of data presentation. The District of Columbia and Guam have no primary divisions, and each area is considered an equivalent entity for purposes of data presentation. The Census Bureau treats the following entities as equivalents of counties for purposes of data presentation: Municipios in Puerto Rico, Districts and Islands in American Samoa, Municipalities in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and Islands in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The entire area of the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas is covered by counties or equivalent entities. The boundaries for counties and equivalent entities are as of January 1, 2017, primarily as reported through the Census Bureau's Boundary and Annexation Survey (BAS).
Kansas Senate District boundary lines within Wyandotte County, Kansas, including Kansas City, KS, Bonner Springs, KS, Edwardsville, KS that portion of Lake Quivira, KS within Wyandotte County, and the unincorporated remnant of Delaware Township. Also includes portions of District 6 and 10 that extend into Johnson County, Kansas In addition to District 7 that extends into Leavenworth County, Kansas. GIS polygon feature layer dataset derived from ward and precinct data. Represents present-day boundaries.By using this dataset you acknowledge the following:Kansas Open Records Act StatementThe Kansas Open Records Act provides in K.S.A. 45-230 that "no person shall knowingly sell, give or receive, for the purpose of selling or offering for sale, any property or service to persons listed therein, any list of names and addresses contained in, or derived from public records..." Violation of this law may subject the violator to a civil penalty of $500.00 for each violation. Violators will be reported for prosecution.By accessing this site, the user makes the following certification pursuant to K.S.A. 45-220(c)(2): "The requester does not intend to, and will not: (A) Use any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of selling or offering for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed; or (B) sell, give or otherwise make available to any person any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of allowing that person to sell or offer for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed."
Contour lines were generated at 2 foot intervals by county using Kansas LiDAR Bare Earth DEMs collected from 2015 through 2018. The source LiDAR Bare Earth DEM tiles are 1 meter resolution USGS QL2 data. A contouring script developed by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources was adapted to create Kansas contours at every 2 feet, 10 feet at a time. Contour lines were then simplified using a 2 foot tolerance, and lines less than 100 feet were removed. There is a identifier in the attribute table for 10 foot contour lines. Generalization of the contours lines over water bodies and roads will have a triangular appearance due to their lack of elevation data.In steep terrain, it is possible that the individual contours lines may cross each other. Due to the processing steps of creating individual lines and then merging lines into a single file, overlaps may exist and have not been and will not be fixed.For more detailed information on the Kansas LiDAR project areas: LinkPresentation at the 2023 Kansas Association of Mappers conference: LinkThe full Kansas geospatial catalog is administered by the Kansas Data Access & Support Center (DASC) and can be found at the following URL: https://hub.kansasgis.org/
These shapefiles includes surficial geology, contacts, fault, and marker bed layers providing the legend for the surficial geology layer. Original data from 1940's-1960's. This database was developed to create a usable dataset of Kansas counties where no new mapping has taken place. It shows locations of geologic outcrops, contacts, and geologic structures in Kansas counties. This geologic data is that of the original geologic map and is the interpretation of the map's author. New information not included in this data may prove the interpretation to be incorrect. In addition, stratigraphic nomenclature used on the original map may not agree with current usage.Data is from the Kansas Geological Survey - Cartographic Services and its predecessors. The surficial geology layers display attributed polygons representing intervals in the stratigraphic sequence identified and mapped at the surface of the county. In the contacts layers of the database, contacts corresponding to the boundaries between adjacent geologic polygons on the map are represented by attributed line features. Marker bed layers include distinctive beds of rock strata that are easily distinguishable and observable over large horizontal distances. The surface expression of structural geologic features such as faults or the axis of a fold, syncline, or anticline are represented by attributed line features in the faults layers. Not all counties will have layers for all these features. Counties included are: Allen, Barton, Brown, Cheyenne, Clay, Cloud, Cowley, Decatur, Ellsworth, Franklin, Gove, Graham, Grant, Greeley, Harper, Haskell, Jackson, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Logan, Marshall, Meade, Miami, Mitchell, Nemaha, Ottawa, Pratt, Rawlins, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Sheridan, Sherman, Stanton, Stevens, Sumner, Thomas, Trego, Wallace, Wichita
Summary: This dataset serves as a core reference layer in support of the Unified Government's Enterprise GIS (E-GIS). It is used for visualization, query, analysis, and address matching/geocoding of road network. It is also used by the Unified Government's CAD (Computer Aided Dispatch) 9-1-1 system as geographic location aid, and is also shared with Kansas City area's Mid America Regional Council regional E9-1-1 emergency response system.Description: Best cartographic rendering at map scale 1:6000 or smaller. Contains federal, state, county, and city roads, park drives, cemetery drives, plus private roads, ramps, service roads, alleys, and some private drives. Includes street name directional prefix, street name proper, and street type attribution, along with theoretical block address range information. Roads are depicted as a single line in center of pavement (not double-line, edge of pavement).By using this dataset you acknowledge the following:Kansas Open Records Act StatementThe Kansas Open Records Act provides in K.S.A. 45-230 that "no person shall knowingly sell, give or receive, for the purpose of selling or offering for sale, any property or service to persons listed therein, any list of names and addresses contained in, or derived from public records..." Violation of this law may subject the violator to a civil penalty of $500.00 for each violation. Violators will be reported for prosecution.By accessing this site, the user makes the following certification pursuant to K.S.A. 45-220(c)(2): "The requester does not intend to, and will not: (A) Use any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of selling or offering for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed; or (B) sell, give or otherwise make available to any person any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of allowing that person to sell or offer for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed."
A subset of the Wyandotte County, Kansas tax map parcel polygon feature dataset in ESRI GIS format in Kansas North State Plane NAD83 coordinates, units feet, suitable for use at 1:1200 map scale or smaller. This subset contains only parcels owned by the Wyandotte County Land Bank. The goal of the Wyandotte County Land Bank is to return tax delinquent property to productive use that benefits the community. This layer may include properties in all parts of Wyandotte County, including the cities of Kansas City Kansas, Bonner Springs, Edwardsville, and that portion of City of Lake Quivira in Wyandotte Co. Attributes include the county parcel number (PARCEL and PARCEL_NBR) and Acres (ACRE). Multifarious property and ownership information in separate county taxroll and CAMA databases have been joined to the county parcel number for more complete attribution. Line features represent ownership boundaries per source materials (deed, plat, legal description, etc.) and are approximations of true ownership lines. Not included in this dataset are plat lot and block # designations, subdivision boundaries across ROW, ROW polys, easements, multi-story condominium property boundaries, or lot dimensions.
City limits (corporate) boundary lines for municipalities within Wyandotte County, Kansas, including cities of Kansas City, KS, Bonner Springs, Ks, Edwardsville, KS, that portion of City of Lake Quivira within Wyandotte County, and unincorporated remnant of Delaware Township. This dataset also contains city boundaries for Bonner Springs, KS and Lake Quivira, KS, that continue across Wyandotte Co. corporate boundary and into neighboring Johnson and Leavenworth Counties. GIS polygon feature layer dataset derived from source document legal boundary and annexation documents using reference map information at 1:1200 scale. Represents present-day boundary.By using this dataset you acknowledge the following:Kansas Open Records Act StatementThe Kansas Open Records Act provides in K.S.A. 45-230 that "no person shall knowingly sell, give or receive, for the purpose of selling or offering for sale, any property or service to persons listed therein, any list of names and addresses contained in, or derived from public records..." Violation of this law may subject the violator to a civil penalty of $500.00 for each violation. Violators will be reported for prosecution.By accessing this site, the user makes the following certification pursuant to K.S.A. 45-220(c)(2): "The requester does not intend to, and will not: (A) Use any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of selling or offering for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed; or (B) sell, give or otherwise make available to any person any list of names or addresses contained in or derived from the records or information for the purpose of allowing that person to sell or offer for sale any property or service to any person listed or to any person who resides at any address listed."
Geospatial data about Johnson County, Kansas Sewer Service Areas. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
HydroEnforced DEM: Hydro-Enforced DEM (HDEM) countywide mosaic representing the bare earth DEM with hydro-connectors burned into the surface. The Hydro-Connectors determine the lowest ground at each end of the DEM and slopes the elevation across the burn for a more realistic connection on the surface. DEM mosaics were created from LiDAR bare earth tiles from Kansas LiDAR projects ranging from 2015 thru 2018. HydroEnforced Geodatabase Products:Breaklines: A spatial Dataset with line features identifying meaningful breaks in the terrain that are important for 2D hydraulic modeling. Breaks captured include Dam, Levee, Lagoons, and Roads. Levees from the NLD or Dams from the NRCS/KDA databases are included with specific Levee/Dam names attributed for reference as well. Not all AG-Dams have been captured in this process, but rather, those lower in the watershed that are more likely to impact contributing waters for downstream flood modeling.HydroConnectors: A spatial dataset consisting of lines that represent underground water connections such as culverts. Drainage area is computed and based on drainage area values, a score is applied to the hydro-connector buffer. The buffer will define how wide the hydro-connector should be for burning into the DEM. Hydro-Connectors representing valves from the NLD are applied and those generated for Dams focus on using the primary spillway. Underground pipe networks provided by respective cities were used to help define flow path for streamlines in urbanized areas.Road Breakline: A spatial dataset consisting of lines that have been topographically corrected for road networks within each county. These serve as additional hydraulic breaklines where the road centerline has been adjusted to the high ground of the road from the DEM as opposed to simply digitizing the centerline.Contour lines were generated at 2 foot intervals by county using Kansas LiDAR Bare Earth DEMs collected from 2015 through 2018. The source LiDAR Bare Earth DEM tiles are 1 meter resolution USGS QL2 data. A contouring script developed by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources was adapted to create Kansas contours at every 2 feet, 10 feet at a time. Contour lines were then simplified using a 2 foot tolerance, and lines less than 100 feet were removed. There is a identifier in the attribute table for 10 foot contour lines. Generalization of the contours lines over water bodies and roads will have a triangular appearance due to their lack of elevation data.The full Kansas geospatial catalog is administered by the Kansas Data Access & Support Center (DASC) and can be found at the following URL: https://hub.kansasgis.org/Counties may have multiple years available. Download file may contain streams, ponds or lakes depending on features for that county.
A subset of the Wyandotte County, Kansas tax map parcel polygon feature dataset in ESRI GIS format in Kansas North State Plane NAD83 coordinates, units feet, suitable for use at 1:1200 map scale or smaller. This subset contains only parcels owned by the Wyandotte County Land Bank. The goal of the Wyandotte County Land Bank is to return tax delinquent property to productive use that benefits the community. This layer may include properties in all parts of Wyandotte County, including the cities of Kansas City Kansas, Bonner Springs, Edwardsville, and that portion of City of Lake Quivira in Wyandotte Co. Attributes include the county parcel number (PARCEL and PARCEL_NBR) and Acres (ACRE). Multifarious property and ownership information in separate county taxroll and CAMA databases have been joined to the county parcel number for more complete attribution. Line features represent ownership boundaries per source materials (deed, plat, legal description, etc.) and are approximations of true ownership lines. Not included in this dataset are plat lot and block # designations, subdivision boundaries across ROW, ROW polys, easements, multi-story condominium property boundaries, or lot dimensions.
This database includes surficial geology, contacts, fault, and marker bed layers providing the legend for the surficial geology layer. Original data from 1940's-1960's. Data is from the Kansas Geological Survey - Cartographic Services and its predecessors. The surficial geology layers display attributed polygons representing intervals in the stratigraphic sequence identified and mapped at the surface of the county. In the contacts layers of the database, contacts corresponding to the boundaries between adjacent geologic polygons on the map are represented by attributed line features. Marker bed layers include distinctive beds of rock strata that are easily distinguishable and observable over large horizontal distances. The surface expression of structural geologic features such as faults or the axis of a fold, syncline, or anticline are represented by attributed line features in the faults layers. Not all counties will have layers for all these features. Counties included are: Allen, Barton, Brown, Cheyenne, Clay, Cloud, Cowley, Decatur, Ellsworth, Franklin, Gove, Graham, Grant, Greeley, Harper, Haskell, Jackson, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Logan, Marshall, Meade, Miami, Mitchell, Nemaha, Ottawa, Pratt, Rawlins, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Sheridan, Sherman, Stanton, Stevens, Sumner, Thomas, Trego, Wallace, Wichita
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) Hazardous Material Routes were developed using the 2004 First Edition TIGER/Line files. The routes are described in the National Hazardous Material Route Registry (NMHRR). The on-line NMHRR linkage is http://hazmat.fmcsa.dot.gov/nhmrr/index.asp With the exception of 13 features that were not identified with the Tiger/Lines, Hazmat routes were created by extracting the TIGER/Line segments that corresponded to each individual route. Hazmat routes in the NTAD, are organized into 3 database files, hazmat.shp, hmroutes.dbf, and hmstcnty.dbf. Each record in each database represents a unique Tiger/Line segment. These Tiger/Line segments are grouped into routes identified as character strings in the ROUTE_ID field in the hmroutes.dbf table. The route name appearing in the ROUTE_ID is assigned by FMCSA and is unique for each State [this sentence could be deleted - it doesn't add a lot to it]. The hmstcnty.dbf table allows the user to select routes by State and County. A single shapefile, called hazmat.shp, represents geometry for all routes in the United States.
© The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) This layer is sourced from maps.bts.dot.gov.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) Hazardous Material Routes (NTAD 2015) were developed using the 2004 First Edition TIGER/Line files. The routes are described in the National Hazardous Material Route Registry (NMHRR). The on-line NMHRR linkage is http://hazmat.fmcsa.dot.gov/nhmrr/index.asp With the exception of 13 features that were not identified with the Tiger/Lines, Hazmat routes were created by extracting the TIGER/Line segments that corresponded to each individual route. Hazmat routes in the NTAD, are organized into 3 database files, hazmat.shp, hmroutes.dbf, and hmstcnty.dbf. Each record in each database represents a unique Tiger/Line segment. These Tiger/Line segments are grouped into routes identified as character strings in the ROUTE_ID field in the hmroutes.dbf table. The route name appearing in the ROUTE_ID is assigned by FMCSA and is unique for each State [this sentence could be deleted - it doesn't add a lot to it]. The hmstcnty.dbf table allows the user to select routes by State and County. A single shapefile, called hazmat.shp, represents geometry for all routes in the United States.
© The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)
Road centerlines in Wyandotte County, as an ESRI GIS dataset in Kansas North State Plane, NAD83, units feet. Best cartographic rendering at map scale 1:6000 or smaller. Contains federal, state, county, and city roads, park drives, cemetery drives, plus private roads, ramps, service roads, alleys, and some private drives. Includes street name directional prefix, street name proper, and street type attribution, along with theoretical block address range information. Roads are depicted as a single line in center of pavement (not double-line, edge of pavement).
Easements and setbacks are legal concepts in land use and property rights, common in real estate and urban planning:- Easements grant the legal right to use someone else's land for specific purposes (e.g., utilities, access, or public use) without transferring ownership.- Setbacks are zoning regulations specifying the minimum distance between a building and property boundaries (front, side, and rear). They ensure safety, aesthetics, and orderly development, varying by location and zoning. Setbacks are typically measured in feet or meters from the property line to the building.
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Using this application, navigate to county either by typing the name in the search box or using the pan, zoom in and zoom out tools. Click on the county boundary to bring up the pop-up. Some details about the county appear in the pop-up as well as a links to the PDFs (Half-Inch Map, Quarter-Inch Map, Functional Classification Map). At the top, there is a link to a page that gives information about prices and how to place orders for paper maps. There is also a link to historic county maps. Maps are generated annually. More information about the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) can be found at the following URL: ksdot.org.