Map developed by Jefferson County ITS GIS. Using the most current version of the Municipal Boundaries - these do change regularly. This map is made available to the public - there is a disclaimer statement in the marginalia.
Cook County GIS Department map of municipal boundaries in Cook Cook County, Illinois in PDF format. Includes major streets, waterbodies, rail, Cook County Forest Preserve, and municipal boundaries.
Map of Municipalities in the Strait of Georgia' Description:The 'Map of Municipalities in the Strait of Georgia' visually demonstrates to the viewer the municipalities that are found within the Strait of Georgia region of British Columbia. The map includes all eligible municipalities within this area, such as villages, towns, and cities. Furthermore, the map includes basic information on each municipality, such as its website, social media pages, and contact information. This map was compiled in 2021, with the use of both open-source data and information provided by the Government of British Columbia and the Pacific Salmon Foundation.Map Data Sources:The 'Map of Municipalities in the Strait of Georgia' was made possible thanks to the data provided by the Government of British Columbia and the Pacific Salmon Foundation.Contact Us: If you have any questions regarding the map or wish to have your municipality featured within it, then please fill out our form by clicking here.Using the Map:Please feel free to use the search menu to look up the particular community or municipality that you are looking for.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Contains 2 datasets: * lower and single tier municipalities * upper tier municipalities and districts.
This is a map of Prince George's County Municipal boundaries. This map is updated when changes are needed.
This map service is provided by NC Department of Transportation and represents Municipal Boundaries defined through the Powell Bill 2023.This data was created to assist governmental agencies and others in making resource management decisions through use of a Geographic Information System. Municipal boundaries are recognized as a base cartographic layer for location analysis. The data are current for fiscal year 2023.These Municipal Boundaries data are based on the Powell Bill Program maps for the 2023 fiscal year. Municipalities in North Carolina that participate in the Powell Bill Program are required to submit to NCDOT on a regular basis. These data include incorporated municipalities in North Carolina that participate in the Powell Bill Program. Boundaries of municipalities which do not participate in the Powell Bill Program are also included in this data. Sources for the boundaries vary in scale and format as provided by the Municipalities.Additional metadata: GIS Data Layers (ncdot.gov)
Publication Date: May 2025.
A vector polygon layer of all city and town boundaries in New York State. The source data was originally a compilation of U.S. Geological Survey 1:100,000-scale digital vector files and NYS Department of Transportation 1:24,000-scale and 1:75,000-scale digital vector files. Boundaries were revised to 1:24,000-scale positional accuracy and selectively updated based on municipal boundary reviews, court decisions and NYS Department of State Local Law filings for annexations, dissolutions, and incorporations. Currently, boundary changes are made based on NYS Department of State Local Law filings (https://locallaws.dos.ny.gov/). Additional updates and corrections are made as needed in partnership with municipalities.
Additional metadata, including field descriptions, can be found at the NYS GIS Clearinghouse: https://gis.ny.gov/civil-boundaries.
Spatial Reference of Source Data: NAD 1983 UTM Zone 18N. Spatial Reference of Map Service: WGS 1984 Web Mercator Auxiliary Sphere.
This map service is available to the public.
The maps contain municipal boundaries, municipality name and municipality number. The data is distributed as JPEG, EMF, PPT and AI (Adobe Illustrator file).
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 Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: however, there are special cases:- Graphic documents may define sectors reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas.- They delimit, where appropriate, the areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted.- The installations necessary for collective equipment, agricultural or forestry exploitation and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from a classification.
Created and managed by the Department of Local Affairs (DOLA) at the State of Colorado, this data shows all the local municipalities within the state. Attribution includes information regarding the municipality name, description, order number, etc.For more information on municipalities in the State of Colorado, visit the DOLA website here.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Classification of municipalities according to the maps of the PDPFCI of the department of Aveyron. — "map 4: Area by commune of classes of strong to very strong hazard” Field: Map4_S_a 1 = 0-120 2= 120-290 3= 290-680 4= 680-1 310 5=1 310-3 320 6= 3 320-9 680 — "map 5: Exposure of current human issues to the hazard (Surfaces per commune located less than 100 m from the current building and in strong to very strong)” Field: Map5_S_H 1 = 0-15 2 = 15-35 3 = 35-70 4 = 70-129 5 = 129-264 6 = 264-714 — "map 6: Exposure of future human issues to the hazard (Surfaces per commune of future human issues located less than 100 m from the strong to very strong hazard)” Field: Map6_S_H 1 = 0 2 = 1-5 3 = 5-10 4 = 10-20 5 = 20-50 6 = 50-213 ‘Map 7: Forest risk per municipality (Surface per municipality with strong or very strong forest risk)” Field: Carte7_S_P 1 = 0-90 2 = 90-220 3 = 220-510 4 = 510-1 000 5 = 1 000-3 000 6 = 3 000-6 000 — 'map 8: Environmental risk per municipality (Surface per municipality with strong or very strong environmental risk)” Field: Map8_S_E 1 = 0-90 2 = 90-280 3 = 280-610 4 = 610-1 330 5 = 1 330-3 510 6 = 3 510-8 590 — 'map 9: Summary of risk by municipality’ Field: Map9_Sen 1 = 1-140 2 = 140-380 3 = 380-850 4 = 850-1 490 5 = 1 490-3 320 6 = 3 320-8 960
Maryland Department of Planning (MDP) maps annexations from municipalities. This dataset is created and maintained by the Maryland Department of Planning. These boundaries are not intended to serve as a legal description. Fields:Municipality Name: Name of Municipality located in Maryland.Jurisdiction Code – Four letter county code: ALLE (Allegany), ANNE (Anne Arundel), BACI (Baltimore City), BACO (Baltimore County), CALV (Calvert), CARO (Caroline), CARR (Carroll), CECI (Cecil), CHAR (Charles), DORC (Dorchester), FRED (Frederick), GARR (Garrett), HARF (Harford), HOWA (Howard), KENT (Kent), MONT (Montgomery), PRIN (Prince George’s) QUEE (Queen Anne’s), SOME (Somerset), STMA (St. Mary’s), TALB (Talbot), WASH (Washington), WICO (Wicomico), WORC (Worcester). Last updated: 9/5/2024This is an MD iMAP hosted service. Find more information at https://imap.maryland.gov.Feature Service Link:https://mdgeodata.md.gov/imap/rest/services/Boundaries/MD_PoliticalBoundaries/FeatureServer/2
This product contains all streets in the Netherlands that are included in the National Roads File (NWB) with the road manager Municipality, supplemented with the contact information about the road manager. The NWB Road File is a digital geographical file of all roads in the Netherlands. Included are all roads managed by road authorities such as the national government, provinces, municipalities and water boards, but only insofar as they are provided with a street name or number. So separate footpaths and cycle paths and unpaved roads, if provided with a street name, are also included in the NWB-Wegen. If a road has separate lanes, which is especially the case with national roads, these are processed as separate road sections in the file. The NWB Roads database currently consists of almost 159,000 hectopoints and more than 1.1 million digitized road sections with a total length of over 160,000 kilometers (measured in January 2022). The NWB Roads file is updated monthly. More information and news about the NWB can be found at https://nationaalwegendossier.nl/ Representatives of municipalities, provinces, water boards and Rijkswaterstaat have started designing and organizing the collaboration around the NWB. In the context of this further development of the NWB, we would like to get in touch with you, the NWB user. We therefore ask you to send an email with your contact details to the following address: nwb@rws.nl"
The Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: however, there are special cases:- Graphic documents may define sectors reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas.- They delimit, where appropriate, the areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted.- The installations necessary for collective equipment, agricultural or forestry exploitation and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from a classification.
The CT Municipalities layer consists of individual polygons representing each of the 169 municipalities that make up the state of Connecticut. This feature class is based on the Towns layer originally created by CTDEEP from USGS maps. The towns from the CTDEEP data were dissolved to create 169 records (one for each town). Fields were added and deleted to create a generic schema.The CT Municipalities feature class was created in (municipality) alphabetical order. Fields were added to identify the municipality number and the CTDOT Municipality number, which differ from each other in some cases. In 1947 the town of Saybrook officially changed its name to Deep River. Other State agencies and municipalities changed their numbering systems to reflect this name change, however, most of what is now CTDOT kept their existing numbering system. This is why the CTDOT town number for Deep River is 122, the number formerly assigned to Saybrook.The square miles associated with each town are for their interior land mass area. Coastal communities have boundaries that extend into Long Island Sound. These town boundary extensions into Long Island Sound are not included in the square miles field.CTDOT has created and will maintain a cartographic rendering of the geometric shape of Municipal boundaries. Official Town and City designations as incorporated areas consisting of an authorized governing body are managed by CT's Office of Policy and Management (OPM).CTDOT has undertaken a good faith effort to represent the boundaries cartographically in a fair and equitable fashion, from the best available data compiled from existing state, regional, and local resources including - existing historical cartographic renderings of the boundary locations, supplemental survey information, and map submissions. Corrections can be submitted to the CTDOT for incorporation and correction where applicable.Attribution was assigned to designations managed by a variety of entities that strictly follow Municipal boundaries and additional designations will be added as requested by State, regional, and local partners.
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.
surface layer of the municipalities of the Eure in which the AFB will expertise the rivers. The progressive mapping concerns 15 municipalities in the area of the marsh-Vernier, the maritime risle and part of the major river Seine. For the other municipalities, the mapping is considered valid. More information on the website of the Prefecture: http://www.eure.gouv.fr/Politiques-publiques/Environnement/Politique-de-l-eau-et-de-la-nature/La-mission-Inter-Services-de-l-Eau-et-de-la-Nature-MISEN27/Doctrines/Methodologie-d-elaboration-de-la-cartographie-des-cours-d-eau
This political boundary layer is the most accurate representing the city and town boundaries in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.This datalayer has been created from latitude and longitude coordinates found in the 68-volume Harbor and Lands Commission Town Boundary Atlas.
This Atlas series, and updates since it was published, describes the
legal boundary for each of the 351 municipalities in Massachusetts.
These coordinates were recorded from surveys of the location of each
boundary marker around the periphery of each community. Each survey was
tied into higher order monumented survey control points. The Atlases
also include detailed descriptions of each community's boundary and
location maps for each of the original boundary marker locations. The
original surveys were conducted in the 1890s. The Atlas series was
published in the early 1900s and has since been updated by the Survey
Section of the Massachusetts Highway Department with changes as they are
approved by the legislature.MassGIS staff collaborated closely
with staff from the Survey Section during the development of this data
layer. MassGIS staff keyed the coordinates into a database; that data
entry was double-checked by staff from the Survey Section. Staff from
the Survey Section then converted the latitude/longitude coordinates to
the NAD83 datum and also created a version of the coordinates in state
plane coordinates with units of meters. MassGIS used the state plane
coordinates to "generate" points in ArcGIS. Boundary arcs from the
existing USGS-derived municipal boundary data layer were then snapped to
the survey-derived points. The differences between the municipal
boundary arcs digitized from those on the USGS quads and those created
by snapping to the survey-derived coordinates are typically plus or
minus 12 feet, although these differences are sometimes less and
sometimes more. Some municipal boundary arcs (about 15% of the total)
follow the edge of a road or rail right-of-way or a stream or river
channel. In these cases, the new boundary arcs were "heads up"
digitized based on features visible on the statewide 1:5,000 color orthos from imagery flown in 2001. For communities with a coastal boundary, MassGIS collaborated with the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority and the Department of Environmental Protection to complete a 1:12,000 scale coastline.The boundaries are included in Esri's World Topographic Map through participation in its Community Maps program.City/Town names' labels are included in this service.(This service was published from a map document using the Web Mercator projection for the data frame.)For full metadata please see https://www.mass.gov/info-details/massgis-data-municipalities
This map layer includes cities and towns in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. A city or town is a place with a recorded population, usually with at least one central area that provides commercial activities. Cities are generally larger than towns; no distinction is made between cities and towns in this map layer.
This layer is a component of Populated Places.
This map layer includes cities and towns in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands (NTAD 2015). A city or town is a place with a recorded population, usually with at least one central area that provides commercial activities. Cities are generally larger than towns; no distinction is made between cities and towns in this map layer.
© The National Atlas
Map developed by Jefferson County ITS GIS. Using the most current version of the Municipal Boundaries - these do change regularly. This map is made available to the public - there is a disclaimer statement in the marginalia.