Geographic location of off-street parking locations in the downtown area of Austin, TX. This includes surface parking lots and parking garages.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This dataset shows all high schools that were included in the 2020 TEA 4-year graduation rate report, and indicates their street address, zip code, district, and type of school (private/charter).
Downtown Austin Recycling, Trash & Litter-Control Services: To reduce truck traffic downtown and help Austin achieve its Zero Waste goals, Austin Resource Recovery manages a commercial trash and recycling contract for businesses located in the Downtown Austin Recycling and Trash Service District (see map). Every night, Austin Resource Recovery sweeps and cleans designated streets and alleys in the Downtown Recycling and Trash Service District, and trash is collected from receptacles along Sixth Street and Congress Avenue. Learn more about how Austin Resource Recovery keeps Austin clean. Austin Resource Recovery also manages a commercial trash and recycling Dumpster contract, required by Austin City Council Ordinance 20051020-063 for businesses located in the Downtown Austin Recycling and Trash Service District. Businesses and residents in this service district have access to convenient Single Stream recycling Dumpsters in their alleys. These customers can place all of the following materials in any alley recycling Dumpster, with no sorting required.
Street Sweeping Zones- There are currently eight street sweeping zones. Street sweeping is carried out four to six times a year monday thru friday per zone.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
TRANSPORTATION.asmp_street_network
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
Parking transactions for street parking and city operated lots. This includes data from physical parking kiosks and app payments through ParkATX.
Spatial data of physical parking assets such as pay stations and meters are available on ArcGIS Online: https://austin.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=1882302d40784b94a9036260cf518a7c
The source code that processes the city's parking transaction data is available on GitHub: https://github.com/cityofaustin/atd-parking-data
To Vote recognizes Austin's suffragists during the 100th, the 55th, and the 45th anniversaries of all women gaining the right to vote in America. Many people who worked hard for that right are buried in Austin’s municipal cemeteries. This is a map tour of some notable suffragists buried in these cemeteries.One of those cemeteries is Oakwood Cemetery, situated just northeast of the city limits when it was established in 1839. Now, after decades of city expansion, the cemetery is in the heart of Austin. The cemetery holds the namesakes of many Austin buildings, streets, and beloved parks. The final resting place for more than 23,000 people, Oakwood Cemetery remains an enduring link to the community, cultures, and life stories that built the great city just beyond its gates.The Oakwood Cemetery Chapel was created in 1914, 75 years after the cemetery was founded, to host funeral and memorial services on site. The cemetery is evidence of the changing city and the past century’s shifting attitudes about mortuary services. Reopened in spring 2019, the Chapel is part of the Museums and Cultural Programs Division of the Parks and Recreation Department of the City of Austin. The Chapel is a visitor center where we can, as an act of remembrance, learn about our cultural heritage through the people who were buried in the surrounding cemetery. Genealogy reveals our forebearers' influence on the past and future. We share and collect individual narratives to create a framework for the collective human story.Oakwood Cemetery Chapel's digital history exhibits are published here:www.austintexas.gov/page/oakwood-cemetery-chapel-resources
Map of Exhumed Burials for Dashboard for All Together Here Symposium October 2020. Created from Hicks & Co report of exhumed burials at Oakwood Chapel Cemetery. All Together Here interprets the archaeology project at the Oakwood Cemetery Chapel. During the rehabilitation of the Chapel in 2016, there was a painful discovery: the Chapel had been constructed over preexisting burials.Oakwood Cemetery is in the heart of Austin. When it was established in 1839, it was on the outskirts of a 1.5 square mile frontier town. The cemetery holds the namesakes of many Austin buildings, streets, and beloved parks. The final resting place for more than 23,000 people, Oakwood Cemetery remains an enduring link to the community, cultures, and life stories that built the great city just beyond its gates.The Oakwood Cemetery Chapel was built in 1914, 75 years after the cemetery was established, to host funeral and memorial services on site. Reopened in 2019, the Chapel is a visitor center where we can, as an act of remembrance, learn about our cultural heritage through the people who were buried in the surrounding cemetery. The Chapel is part of the Museums and Cultural Programs Division of the Parks and Recreation Department of the City of Austin. Oakwood Cemetery Chapel's digital history exhibits are published here: www.austintexas.gov/page/oakwood-cemetery-chapel-resources
This map is meant to help highlight and navigate the different sections, burial grounds, features and their associated data within Oakwood Cemetery in Austin, Texas in an easy to navigate and understand format.Oakwood Cemetery was situated just northeast of the city limits. Now, after decades of city expansion, the cemetery is in the heart of Austin. The cemetery holds the namesakes of many Austin buildings, streets, and beloved parks. The final resting place for more than 23,000 people, Oakwood Cemetery remains an enduring link to the community, cultures, and life stories that built the great city just beyond its gates.
The Oakwood Cemetery Chapel was created in 1914, 75 years after the cemetery was founded, to host funeral and memorial services on site. The cemetery is evidence of the changing city and the past century’s shifting attitudes about mortuary services. Reopened in spring 2019, the Chapel is part of the Museums and Cultural Programs Division of the Parks and Recreation Department of the City of Austin. The Chapel is a visitor center where we can, as an act of remembrance, learn about our cultural heritage through the people who were buried in the surrounding cemetery. Genealogy reveals our forebearers' influence on the past and future. We share and collect individual narratives to create a framework for the collective human story.
Oakwood Cemetery Chapel's digital history exhibits are published here.
This web map contains descriptions and locations of the different sites of the first Baptist Church founded by Rev. Jacob Fontaine.The Fall 2019 exhibition To Believe features video, photography, digital maps and performances to describe Black East Austin's historic and contemporary practices of faith and belief. Our inspiration is Reverend Jacob Fontaine, a man freed from slavery at age 57, who founded six Baptist churches and the St. John Baptist Association, married 111 couples, and created Austin’s Black newspaper “The Gold Dollar”.Oakwood Cemetery was situated just northeast of the city limits when it was established in 1839. Now, after decades of city expansion, the cemetery is in the heart of Austin. The cemetery holds the namesakes of many Austin buildings, streets, and beloved parks. The final resting place for more than 23,000 people, Oakwood Cemetery remains an enduring link to the community, cultures, and life stories that built the great city just beyond its gates.The Oakwood Cemetery Chapel was created in 1914, 75 years after the cemetery was founded, to host funeral and memorial services on site. The cemetery is evidence of the changing city and the past century’s shifting attitudes about mortuary services. Reopened in spring 2019, the Chapel is part of the Museums and Cultural Programs Division of the Parks and Recreation Department of the City of Austin. The Chapel is a visitor center where we can, as an act of remembrance, learn about our cultural heritage through the people who were buried in the surrounding cemetery. Genealogy reveals our forebearers' influence on the past and future. We share and collect individual narratives to create a framework for the collective human story.Oakwood Cemetery Chapel's digital history exhibits are published here:www.austintexas.gov/page/oakwood-cemetery-chapel-resources
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Geographic location of off-street parking locations in the downtown area of Austin, TX. This includes surface parking lots and parking garages.