The Digital City Map (DCM) data represents street lines and other features shown on the City Map, which is the official street map of the City of New York. The City Map consists of 5 different sets of maps, one for each borough, totaling over 8000 individual paper maps. The DCM datasets were created in an ongoing effort to digitize official street records and bring them together with other street information to make them easily accessible to the public. The Digital City Map (DCM) is comprised of seven datasets; Digital City Map, Street Center Line, City Map Alterations, Arterial Highways and Major Streets, Street Name Changes (areas), Street Name Changes (lines), and Street Name Changes (points). All of the Digital City Map (DCM) datasets are featured on the Streets App All previously released versions of this data are available at BYTES of the BIG APPLE- Archive
This vector tile layer presents the World Topographic Map (Local Language) style (World Edition) and provides a basemap for the world, symbolized with a classic Esri topographic map style. This layer includes highways, major roads, minor roads, railways, water features, cities, parks, landmarks, building footprints, and administrative boundaries, designed for use with World Hillshade for added context. This vector tile layer provides unique capabilities for customization, high-resolution display, and use in mobile devices.This vector tile layer is built using the same data sources used for other Esri Vector Basemaps. For details on data sources contributed by the GIS community, view the map of Community Maps Basemap Contributors. Esri Vector Basemaps are updated monthly.This layer is used in the Topographic (Local Language) web map included in ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World.See the Vector Basemaps group for other vector tile layers. Customize this StyleLearn more about customizing this vector basemap style using the Vector Tile Style Editor. Additional details are available in ArcGIS Online Blogs and the Esri Vector Basemaps Reference Document.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The authoritative City of Sioux Falls street map(s).
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
"The New Taipei City Local Characteristics Map" uses ancient navigation maps as the background, designed in a cartoon style, and combines popular topics such as movies and current events to introduce the characteristics of 29 districts, including traditional activities, local products, architecture, and attractions. It was created through an online vote of 480,000 votes and features popular local characteristics of New Taipei City.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: construction sectors and inconstructible sectors. There are, however, special cases in which graphical documents: — may define areas reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas; — define, where appropriate, areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted; — indicate areas where the facilities necessary for public facilities, agricultural or forestry operations and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from classification. The areas of the communal map do not always cover the entire communal territory. The areas of the municipality not covered by a sector are represented by an object in order to cover the whole municipality.
Unlock precise, high-quality Map data covering 164M+ verified locations across 220+ countries. With 50+ enriched attributes including coordinates, building structures, and spatial geometry our dataset provides the granularity and accuracy needed for in-depth spatial analysis. Powered by AI-driven enrichment and deduplication, and backed by 30+ years of expertise, our GIS solutions support industries ranging from mapping and navigation to urban planning and market analysis, helping businesses and organizations make smarter, data-driven decisions.
Key use cases of GIS Data helping our customers :
Cities have gotten creative with map-based apps and dashboards to connect citizens to food, and help small businesses get the word out about available services.Key TakeawaysFamilies find resources using local maps of food banks and school district distribution centers.Local businesses benefit from interactive maps showing residents available services for delivery and take out.With volatile grocery store inventory, shoppers rely on crowdsourced maps to know what’s in stock._Communities around the world are taking strides in mitigating the threat that COVID-19 (coronavirus) poses. Geography and location analysis have a crucial role in better understanding this evolving pandemic.When you need help quickly, Esri can provide data, software, configurable applications, and technical support for your emergency GIS operations. Use GIS to rapidly access and visualize mission-critical information. Get the information you need quickly, in a way that’s easy to understand, to make better decisions during a crisis.Esri’s Disaster Response Program (DRP) assists with disasters worldwide as part of our corporate citizenship. We support response and relief efforts with GIS technology and expertise.More information...
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: construction sectors and inconstructible sectors. There are, however, special cases in which graphical documents: — may define areas reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas; — define, where appropriate, areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted; — indicate areas where the facilities necessary for public facilities, agricultural or forestry operations and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from classification. The areas of the communal map do not always cover the entire communal territory. The areas of the municipality not covered by a sector are represented by an object in order to cover the whole municipality.
This map shows roads, tax lots, schools, and parks for the entirety of the city. The map is 36" x 48" in format and is optimized for that size in print. It is updated periodically.
The Digital City Map (DCM) data represents street lines and other features shown on the City Map, which is the official street map of the City of New York. The City Map consists of 5 different sets of maps, one for each borough, totaling over 8000 individual paper maps. The DCM datasets were created in an ongoing effort to digitize official street records and bring them together with other street information to make them easily accessible to the public. The Digital City Map (DCM) is comprised of seven datasets; Digital City Map, Street Center Line, City Map Alterations, Arterial Highways and Major Streets, Street Name Changes (areas), Street Name Changes (lines), and Street Name Changes (points). All of the Digital City Map (DCM) datasets are featured on the Streets App All previously released versions of this data are available at BYTES of the BIG APPLE- Archive Updates for this dataset, along with other multilayered maps on NYC Open Data, are temporarily paused while they are moved to a new mapping format. Please visit https://www.nyc.gov/site/planning/data-maps/open-data/dwn-digital-city-map.page to utilize this data in the meantime.
This city boundary shapefile was extracted from Esri Data and Maps for ArcGIS 2014 - U.S. Populated Place Areas. This shapefile can be joined to 500 Cities city-level Data (GIS Friendly Format) in a geographic information system (GIS) to make city-level maps.
The Digital City Map (DCM) data represents street lines and other features shown on the City Map, which is the official street map of the City of New York. The City Map consists of 5 different sets of maps, one for each borough, totaling over 8000 individual paper maps. The DCM datasets were created in an ongoing effort to digitize official street records and bring them together with other street information to make them easily accessible to the public. The Digital City Map (DCM) is comprised of seven datasets; Digital City Map, Street Center Line, City Map Alterations, Arterial Highways and Major Streets, Street Name Changes (areas), Street Name Changes (lines), and Street Name Changes (points).
All of the Digital City Map (DCM) datasets are featured on the Streets App
All previously released versions of this data are available at BYTES of the BIG APPLE- Archive
Updates for this dataset, along with other multilayered maps on NYC Open Data, are temporarily paused while they are moved to a new mapping format. Please visit https://www.nyc.gov/site/planning/data-maps/open-data/dwn-digital-city-map.page to utilize this data in the meantime.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The communal map (CC) is digitised according to the national requirements of the CNIG. This lot informs the right to build in the municipality. In addition to building and inconstructible sectors (SECTEUR_CC), it may contain another dataset, the onfacial information (INFO_SURF).
GIS layer containing the drawing of the strategic noise maps known as “the 2nd deadline”, provided for in the European Directive 2002/49/EC and in Articles L.572-1 et seq. of the Environmental Code. Network concerned: road network of local and regional authorities in the Cantal Roads concerned: RRD and VC Card Type: D Source: order of the Prefect of Cantal n°2012-1312 of 19 September 2012 + technical report APAVE/Certio (July 2012)
ESRI ArcGIS Online Map based application allowing users to view historical city boundary annexation and detachment information to and from the 88 incorporated cities within Los Angeles County. Public can use widgets that are available in the app to get information for the Annexations. For information regarding Proposed City Annexation/Detachment and Special District Formation, click here.
This COVADIS data standard concerns local urban planning documents (PLUs) and land use plans (POS that are equivalent to PLU). This data standard provides a technical framework describing in detail how to dematerialise these urban planning documents into a geographical database that is exploitable by a GIS and interoperable tool. This data standard concerns both graphic zoning plans, the overlaying requirements and the regulations applicable to each type of zone.This COVADIS data standard was developed on the basis of the specifications for the dematerialisation of urban planning documents updated in 2012 by the CNIG, itself based on the consolidated version of the urban planning code dated 16 March 2012. The recommendations of these two documents are consistent even if their purpose is not the same. The COVADIS data standard offers definitions and a structure to organise and store existing PLU/POS geographical data in an infrastructure in digital form, while the CNIG specifications serve to frame the digitisation of this data. The ‘Data Structure’ section in this COVADIS standard provides additional recommendations for data file storage (see Part C). These are specific choices for the data infrastructure of the MAA and MEDDE that do not apply outside their context.The communal maps are subject to another COVADIS data standard.
Information layer of the subcomarcal delimitation in accordance with the Regional Law 4/2019, of 4 February, on the reform of the Local Administration of Navarre.
Data used to feed Sustainability Compliance Map. This data comes from the NYC Department of Finance, the US EPA's Portfolio Manager, and grading metric based on Local Law 95 of 2019.
All documents posted online do not have enforceable characters but only informative. The documents which can be relied on can be consulted in the town hall and/or at the head office of the competent EPCI and/or in DDT. C_N_ZONE_URBA_10307_010_Values_TYPEZONE C_N_PRESCRIPTION_PCT_10307_010_Values_LIBELLE C_N_PRESCRIPTION_SURF_10307_010_Values_LIBELLE C_N_ZONE_URBA_10307_010_ Tags C_N_PRESCRIPTION_SURF_10307_010_ Tags C_N_PRESCRIPTION_LIN_10307_010_Values_LIBELLE
This vector tile layer presents the World Street Map (Local Language) style (World Edition) and provides a basemap for the world, symbolized with a classic Esri street map style. This comprehensive street map includes highways, major roads, minor roads, railways, water features, cities, parks, landmarks, building footprints, and administrative boundaries. Labels are in local languages at large scale. This vector tile layer provides unique capabilities for customization, high-resolution display, and use in mobile devices.This vector tile layer is built using the same data sources used for other Esri Vector Basemaps. For details on data sources contributed by the GIS community, view the map of Community Maps Basemap Contributors. Esri Vector Basemaps are updated monthly.This layer is used in the Streets (Local Language) web map included in ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World.See the Vector Basemaps group for other vector tile layers. Customize this StyleLearn more about customizing this vector basemap style using the Vector Tile Style Editor. Additional details are available in ArcGIS Online Blogs and the Esri Vector Basemaps Reference Document.
The Digital City Map (DCM) data represents street lines and other features shown on the City Map, which is the official street map of the City of New York. The City Map consists of 5 different sets of maps, one for each borough, totaling over 8000 individual paper maps. The DCM datasets were created in an ongoing effort to digitize official street records and bring them together with other street information to make them easily accessible to the public. The Digital City Map (DCM) is comprised of seven datasets; Digital City Map, Street Center Line, City Map Alterations, Arterial Highways and Major Streets, Street Name Changes (areas), Street Name Changes (lines), and Street Name Changes (points). All of the Digital City Map (DCM) datasets are featured on the Streets App All previously released versions of this data are available at BYTES of the BIG APPLE- Archive