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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Description: The neighborhoods shown in this dataset are derived from a larger dataset drawn and maintained by the Data Desk, a team of Times reporters and Web developers in downtown L.A. The boundaries have expanded and shifted over time and now cover all of Los Angeles County broken down into 272 neighborhoods.This version of the LA Times boundaries only includes neighborhoods fully or partially within the City of Los Angeles. Neighborhoods that extend into other cities have been clipped to only show the portion(s) of the neighborhoods that are within the City of Los Angeles.Data Source: Los Angeles Times' Mapping LA project.Last Updated: October 7, 2016Refresh Rate: Never - Historical data (Note: should the LA Times update their Mapping LA project with new boundaries in the future, a new LA-specific layer will be added to the GeoHub as well.)
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TwitterThe Mayor’s Office utilizes the most recent data to inform decisions about COVID-19 response and policies. The Los Angeles COVID-19 Neighborhood Map visualizes the cases and deaths across 139 neighborhoods in the city. It includes the same data used by the office to spot changes in infection trends in the city, and identify areas where testing resources should be deployed.Data Source:Data are provided on a weekly basis by the LA County Department of Public Health and prepared by the LA Mayor's Office Innovation Team. The data included in this map are on a one-week lag. That means the data shown here are reporting statistics gathered from one week ago. This map will be updated weekly on Mondays. Click on the maps to zoom in, get more details, and see the legends.
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TwitterThis EnviroAtlas dataset shows the Los Angeles, CA EnviroAtlas community boundary. It represents the outside edge of all the block groups included in the EnviroAtlas Community. This dataset was produced by the US EPA to support research and online mapping activities related to EnviroAtlas. EnviroAtlas (https://www.epa.gov/enviroatlas) allows the user to interact with a web-based, easy-to-use, mapping application to view and analyze multiple ecosystem services for the contiguous United States. The dataset is available as downloadable data (https://edg.epa.gov/data/Public/ORD/EnviroAtlas) or as an EnviroAtlas map service. Additional descriptive information about each attribute in this dataset can be found in its associated EnviroAtlas Fact Sheet (https://www.epa.gov/enviroatlas/enviroatlas-fact-sheets).
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TwitterThis application provides users with access to download PDFs of Community Profiles (for LA County, unincorporated and city areas), as well as maps of LA County Supervisorial Districts in various page sizes and detail. The Supervisorial maps reflect the district boundaries established on December 15, 2021 by the County of Los Angles Citizens Redistricting Commission.These maps were created by the Survey Mapping Property Management team in Public Works, and are meant for informational purposes only.
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TwitterUpdated December 2013.
LA City Council Districts as adopted by Final Ordinance 2012 No. 182168.
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TwitterA web map of Los Angeles communities that lie within the Los Angeles City Council Districts (2012).This map was prepared for the 2018 Los Angeles County City and Community Health Profiles. The council member information is current only as of November 2021.
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TwitterIn 2014 and 2015, The LA County Enterprise GIS team under the Geographic Information Officer worked with the Unincorporated Area Deputies and Field Deputies of each Board Office to establish names that reflect the desires of residents. CSAs differ from the more informal Community geographies because:They are focused on broad statistics and reporting, not mapping of communities.They represent board approved names assigned to Census block groups and city boundaries.They cover the entire unincorporated County (no gaps).There are not overlapping areas. Additionally, CSAs use the following naming conventions:All names are assumed to begin with Unincorporated (e.g. Unincorporated El Camino Village) which will not be part of the CSA Name (so the name of the Statistical Area would be El Camino Village).Names will not contain “Island.” Beginning each name with Unincorporated will distinguish an area from any surrounding cities. There may be one or more exceptions for certain small areas (e.g. Bandini Islands)A forward slash implies an undetermined boundary between two areas within a statistical geography (e.g. Westfield/Academy Hills or View Park/Windsor Hills)Certain established names may include hyphens (e.g. Florence-Firestone)Aliases may be defined in parentheses (e.g. Unincorporated Long Beach (Bonner/Carson Park))The original set of names were derived from community names used in the 2011 Redistricting process, chosen with the assistance of the Board of Supervisors. Updates: 2025 August: CSA updated for San Gabriel city annexation (effective date 8/6/2025). 2025 April: CSA updated for Long Beach city communities. These community areas and names were reviewed and approved by the City of Long Beach - Community Development Department, Advance Planning Division on 3/26/2025. Contacts: Scott Kinsey Scott.Kinsey@longbeach.gov, Bradley Bounds Bradley.Bounds@longbeach.gov, Alejandro Sanchez-Lopez Alejandro.Sanchez-Lopez@longbeach.gov2025 March: CSA update for Duarte City annexation; and Arcadia City detachment and Monrovia City annexation (effective date 3/17/2025).2024 December: CSA data update to include Whittier City annexation (effective date 11/13/2024).2024 April: CSA data updated to include La Verne City annexation (effective date 4/1/2024).2023 December: CSA data updated to include "Unincorporated Charter Oak" (south of 10 Freeway) into "Unincorporated Covina".2023 June: CSA data was updated to include "Kinneloa Mesa" community, which was a part of Unincorporated East Pasadena.2023 January: Updated layer schema to include feature type (“FEAT_TYPE”) field, which can be one of land, water, breakwater, or pier (consistent with the City Boundaries layer).2022 December: CSA data was updated to incorporate the “Tesoro Del Valle” annexation to the city of Santa Clarita. Unincorporated Valencia is now completely annexed to the City of Santa Clarita. In addition to land area, this data also includes other feature types such as piers, breakwater and water area. 2022 September: CSA data was updated to match with city boundaries along shoreline/coastal area and minor boundary adjusted in some other areas.
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TwitterThis application provides users with access to download PDF maps of the Supervisorial Districts (countywide or by district) in various sizes. These maps were created by the Survey Mapping Property Management team in Public Works, and are meant for informational purposes only.
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TwitterThe "Dark Skies" layer was adopted by the BOS in January 2012, prior to final adoption of the Rural Outdoor Lighting District ordinance in November 2012. Please click here to view the full-size Supplemental Districts map in the DRP Map Catalog. "Rural Outdoor Lighting District" is one of the featured layers in this map. These areas only fall within UNINCORPORATED Los Angeles County.For further information, please contact the Ordinance Studies Section, or visit the Rural Outdoor Lighting District Ordinance page on the DRP website at https://planning.lacounty.gov/view/rural_outdoor_lighting_district_ordinance/. Source: L.A. County Department of Regional Planning (DRP) Ordinance Studies and GIS Sections; last update: November 27, 2018 for the Plum Canyon / Skyline Ranch / North Sand Canyon annexation to the City of Santa Clarita.LAST UPDATED: 12/20/22 for Annexation #2021-01 (Tesoro Del Valle)NEED MORE FUNCTIONALITY? If you are looking for more layers or advanced tools and functionality, then try our suite of GIS Web Mapping Applications.
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TwitterThe Community Standards Districts (CSDs) are established as supplemental districts to provide a means of implementing special development standards contained in adopted neighborhood, community, area, specific and local coastal plans within the UNINCORPORATED areas of Los Angeles County, or to provide a means of addressing special problems which are unique to certain geographic areas within the UNINCORPORATED areas of Los Angeles County. For detailed development standards for each CSD, please refer to the Community Standards District portion of the Los Angeles County Code (click here).LAST UPDATED: 4/9/25 for several changes related to the West San Gabriel Area Plan update. These updates took effect on 4/10/25. NOTE - A decision was made at the Board of Supervisor's Hearing that the CSD and Setback updates not be included. However, the GIS layers were updated with these changes and were showing on GIS-NET and Open Data between 4/9/25 and 4/14/25. On 4/14/25, these un-adopted changes were removed and the correct data now shows.NEED MORE FUNCTIONALITY? If you are looking for more layers or advanced tools and functionality, then try our suite of GIS Web Mapping Applications.
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TwitterLand Use Policy as created by the various Area / Community / Coastal / Neighborhood Plans in the UNINCORPORATED County. For more information about the various plans, please click here. This is the Grouped Layer File (.lyr) that can be used in ArcGIS to symbolize all the colors of the various plans within this layer. Please note that this does not have the GIS data attached to it. If you want the actual GIS data layer, please be sure to download that from our Hub here. Once you download the .lyr file, it will show broken links, so you will need to map it to where you download the Area / Community Plan LUP dataset. Please see these instructions for ArcMap for an easy way to 'repair broken links.'LAST UPDATED: 03/10/23 - updated the Florence-Firestone TOD Specific Plan.
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TwitterAttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This web map displays the California Department of Education's (CDE) core set of geographic data layers. This content represents the authoritative source for all statewide public school site locations and school district service areas boundaries for the 2018-19 academic year. The map also includes school and district layers enriched with student demographic and performance information from the California Department of Education's data collections. These data elements add meaningful statistical and descriptive information that can be visualized and analyzed on a map and used to advance education research or inform decision making.
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TwitterESRI 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.
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TwitterLA City Council Districts (2002)
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TwitterThis layer contains the 2011 Official Supervisorial District Boundary for the County of Los Angeles, drawn at the parcel level, per Assessor parcels and the County Cadastral Landbase.Supplemental Information: Adopted September 27, 2011 – Another entry on this portal includes redistricting information from the Districts’ adoption in 2011, along with boundaries drawn at the TIGER street map level. Per Sec. 21500 of the California Elections Code, Supervisor District boundaries are adjusted following each decennial federal census. Published in the County Code under Title 1, Chapter 1.08, boundary descriptions are based on census tracts and city boundaries at the time of adoption.Metes and Bounds descriptions were prepared by the Department of Public Works.2010 Census Blocks provide more information and GIS data downloads on this portal. Census tracts listed in the County Code correspond to the first six digits of the GIS attribute CTCB10.City Boundaries and City Annexations provide current and historical legal city boundary information on this portal.
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TwitterNote: Original web map for Jurisdiction Lookup, currently need to use this version instead due to Esri bug with the Zone Lookup app.City / Community Boundary (for LA County Planning); to be used in a simple lookup application embedded on front page of our organization's web site, click here.This is the associated web application, click here.The main layer shows all incorporated and unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County. The incorporated city boundaries are maintained by the Department of Public Works as part of the cadastral landbase, and reflects the most current annexations as of the date listed below. The unincorporated areas are maintained by the Department of Regional Planning (aka LA County Planning) for land use planning efforts. This is especially important as it relates to the County's General Plan and various area, community, and neighborhood plan updates. Please see relevant links below for more related information:Department of Regional Planning (LA County Planning) - About page.Link to official Public Works City boundary layer (shows all cities and unincorporated area, but not the individual unincorporated communities as recognized by LA County Planning).Link to official Public Works City Annexations layer.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is a filtered version of the Los Angeles Times neighborhood boundaries that only includes boundaries of neighborhoods fully or partially within the City of Los Angeles.
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TwitterThis Web Map shows Zoning and Supplemental Districts for the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County, and is called Z-NET. This feeds into the App of the same name and will soon replace the one that is presently showing on the Department of Regional Planning's website. This Web Map and App shows the following information with hyperlinks to relevant documents:ZoningZoning SP CategoryLand Use PolicyCommunity Standards DistrictsSignificant RidgelineSetback District SetbackSetback District BoundaryEquestrian District (EQD)Flood Protection DistrictRural Outdoor Lighting District (Dark Skies)Transit Oriented DistrictsSignificant Ecological AreasJurisdictional BoundariesSupervisorial DistrictsParcelsUPDATE HISTORY04/01/2025: Experience Builder version went live.Looking for zoning information in an UNINCORPORATED area? Use this tool to VERIFY the jurisdiction and to get the information you need. We do not have zoning or land use data for incorporated cities (those areas are 'masked out' in white).
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TwitterThe Mayor’s Office utilizes the most recent data to inform decisions about COVID-19 response and policies. The Los Angeles COVID-19 Neighborhood Map visualizes the cases and deaths across 139 neighborhoods in the city. It includes the same data used by the office to spot changes in infection trends in the city, and identify areas where testing resources should be deployed.Data Source:Data are provided on a weekly basis by the LA County Department of Public Health and prepared by the LA Mayor's Office Innovation Team. The data included in this map are on a one-week lag. That means the data shown here are reporting statistics gathered from one week ago. This map will be updated weekly on Mondays. Click on the maps to zoom in, get more details, and see the legends.
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TwitterThe community standards districts are established as supplemental districts to provide a means of implementing special development standards contained in adopted neighborhood, community, area, specific and local coastal plans within the UNINCORPORATED areas of Los Angeles County, or to provide a means of addressing special problems which are unique to certain geographic areas within the unincorporated areas of Los Angeles County. For detailed development standards for each CSD, please refer to the Community Standards District portion of the Los Angeles County Code (click here).LAST UPDATED: 4/9/25 for several changes related to the West San Gabriel, and Westside Area Plan updates. These updates took effect on 4/10/25.NOTE - A decision was made at the Board of Supervisor's Hearing that the CSD and Setback updates not be included. However, the GIS layers were updated with these changes and were showing on GIS-NET and Open Data between 4/9/25 and 4/14/25. On 4/14/25, these un-adopted changes were removed and the correct data now shows.NEED MORE FUNCTIONALITY? If you are looking for more layers or advanced tools and functionality, then try our suite of GIS Web Mapping Applications.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Description: The neighborhoods shown in this dataset are derived from a larger dataset drawn and maintained by the Data Desk, a team of Times reporters and Web developers in downtown L.A. The boundaries have expanded and shifted over time and now cover all of Los Angeles County broken down into 272 neighborhoods.This version of the LA Times boundaries only includes neighborhoods fully or partially within the City of Los Angeles. Neighborhoods that extend into other cities have been clipped to only show the portion(s) of the neighborhoods that are within the City of Los Angeles.Data Source: Los Angeles Times' Mapping LA project.Last Updated: October 7, 2016Refresh Rate: Never - Historical data (Note: should the LA Times update their Mapping LA project with new boundaries in the future, a new LA-specific layer will be added to the GeoHub as well.)