5 datasets found
  1. c

    Parcels Public

    • gisdata.countyofnapa.org
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 15, 2023
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    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2023). Parcels Public [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/parcels-public-1
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 15, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Internal view of the parcel layer. This view contains all the attributes that can be seen by County employees.There are approximately 51,300 real property parcels in Napa County. Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. GIS parcel boundaries are maintained by the Information Technology Services GIS team. Assessor Parcel Maps are created and maintained by the Assessor Division Mapping Section. Each parcel has an Assessor Parcel Number (APN) that is its unique identifier. The APN is the link to various Napa County databases containing information such as owner name, situs address, property value, land use, zoning, flood data, and other related information. Data for this map service is sourced from the Napa County Parcels dataset which is updated nightly with any recent changes made by the mapping team. There may at times be a delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel boundary configuration and corresponding information is available in the online GIS parcel viewer.From 1850 to early 1900s assessor staff wrote the name of the property owner and the property value on map pages. They began using larger maps, called “tank maps” because of the large steel cabinet they were kept in, organized by school district (before unification) on which names and values were written. In the 1920s, the assessor kept large books of maps by road district on which names were written. In the 1950s, most county assessors contracted with the State Board of Equalization for board staff to draw standardized 11x17 inch maps following the provisions of Assessor Handbook 215. Maps were originally drawn on linen. By the 1980’s Assessor maps were being drawn on mylar rather than linen. In the early 1990s Napa County transitioned from drawing on mylar to creating maps in AutoCAD. When GIS arrived in Napa County in the mid-1990s, the AutoCAD images were copied over into the GIS parcel layer. Sidwell, an independent consultant, was then contracted by the Assessor’s Office to convert these APN files into the current seamless ArcGIS parcel fabric for the entire County. Beginning with the 2024-2025 assessment roll, the maps are being drawn directly in the parcel fabric layer.Parcels in the GIS parcel fabric are drawn according to the legal description using coordinate geometry (COGO) drawing tools and various reference data such as Public Lands Survey section boundaries and road centerlines. The legal descriptions are not defined by the GIS parcel fabric. Any changes made in the GIS parcel fabric via official records, filed maps, and other source documents are uploaded overnight. There is always at least a 6-month delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel configuration and corresponding information is available in the online parcel viewer for search or download.Parcel boundary accuracy can vary significantly, with errors ranging from a few feet to several hundred feet. These distortions are caused by several factors such as: the map projection - the error derived when a spherical coordinate system model is projected into a planar coordinate system using the local projected coordinate system; and the ground to grid conversion - the distortion between ground survey measurements and the virtual grid measurements. The aim of the parcel fabric is to construct a visual interpretation that is adequate for basic geographic understanding. This digital data is intended for illustration and demonstration purposes only and is not considered a legal resource, nor legally authoritative.SFAP & CFAP DISCLAIMER: Per the California Code, RTC 606. some legal parcels may have been combined for assessment purposes (CFAP) or separated for assessment purposes (SFAP) into multiple parcels for a variety of tax assessment reasons. SFAP and CFAP parcels are assigned their own APN number and primarily result from a parcel being split by a tax rate area boundary, due to a recorded land use lease, or by request of the property owner. Assessor parcel (APN) maps reflect when parcels have been separated or combined for assessment purposes, and are one legal entity. The goal of the GIS parcel fabric data is to distinguish the SFAP and CFAP parcel configurations from the legal configurations, to convey the legal parcel configurations. This workflow is in progress. Please be advised that while we endeavor to restore SFAP and CFAP parcels back to their legal configurations in the primary parcel fabric layer, SFAP and CFAP parcels may be distributed throughout the dataset. Parcels that have been restored to their legal configurations, do not reflect the SFAP or CFAP parcel configurations that correspond to the current property tax delineations. We intend for parcel reports and parcel data to capture when a parcel has been separated or combined for assessment purposes, however in some cases, information may not be available in GIS for the SFAP/CFAP status of a parcel configuration shown. For help or questions regarding a parcel’s SFAP/CFAP status, or property survey data, please visit Napa County’s Surveying Services or Property Mapping Information. For more information you can visit our website: When a Parcel is Not a Parcel | Napa County, CA

  2. c

    Napa County Public Parcels

    • gisdata.countyofnapa.org
    Updated May 23, 2025
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    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2025). Napa County Public Parcels [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/napa-county-public-parcels
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 23, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. Parcel boundaries in GIS are created and maintained by the Assessor’s Division Mapping section and Information Technology Services. There are approximately 51,300 real property parcels in Napa County. Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. GIS parcel boundaries are maintained by the Information Technology Services GIS team. Assessor Parcel Maps are created and maintained by the Assessor Division Mapping Section. Each parcel has an Assessor Parcel Number (APN) that is its unique identifier. The APN is the link to various Napa County databases containing information such as owner name, situs address, property value, land use, zoning, flood data, and other related information. Data for this map service is sourced from the Napa County Parcels dataset which is updated nightly with any recent changes made by the mapping team. There may at times be a delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel boundary configuration and corresponding information is available in the online GIS parcel viewer.From 1850 to early 1900s assessor staff wrote the name of the property owner and the property value on map pages. They began using larger maps, called “tank maps” because of the large steel cabinet they were kept in, organized by school district (before unification) on which names and values were written. In the 1920s, the assessor kept large books of maps by road district on which names were written. In the 1950s, most county assessors contracted with the State Board of Equalization for board staff to draw standardized 11x17 inch maps following the provisions of Assessor Handbook 215. Maps were originally drawn on linen. By the 1980’s Assessor maps were being drawn on mylar rather than linen. In the early 1990s Napa County transitioned from drawing on mylar to creating maps in AutoCAD. When GIS arrived in Napa County in the mid-1990s, the AutoCAD images were copied over into the GIS parcel layer. Sidwell, an independent consultant, was then contracted by the Assessor’s Office to convert these APN files into the current seamless ArcGIS parcel fabric for the entire County. Beginning with the 2024-2025 assessment roll, the maps are being drawn directly in the parcel fabric layer.Parcels in the GIS parcel fabric are drawn according to the legal description using coordinate geometry (COGO) drawing tools and various reference data such as Public Lands Survey section boundaries and road centerlines. The legal descriptions are not defined by the GIS parcel fabric. Any changes made in the GIS parcel fabric via official records, filed maps, and other source documents are uploaded overnight. There is always at least a 6-month delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel configuration and corresponding information is available in the online parcel viewer for search or download.Parcel boundary accuracy can vary significantly, with errors ranging from a few feet to several hundred feet. These distortions are caused by several factors such as: the map projection - the error derived when a spherical coordinate system model is projected into a planar coordinate system using the local projected coordinate system; and the ground to grid conversion - the distortion between ground survey measurements and the virtual grid measurements. The aim of the parcel fabric is to construct a visual interpretation that is adequate for basic geographic understanding. This digital data is intended for illustration and demonstration purposes only and is not considered a legal resource, nor legally authoritative.SFAP & CFAP DISCLAIMER: Per the California Code, RTC 606. some legal parcels may have been combined for assessment purposes (CFAP) or separated for assessment purposes (SFAP) into multiple parcels for a variety of tax assessment reasons. SFAP and CFAP parcels are assigned their own APN number and primarily result from a parcel being split by a tax rate area boundary, due to a recorded land use lease, or by request of the property owner. Assessor parcel (APN) maps reflect when parcels have been separated or combined for assessment purposes, and are one legal entity. The goal of the GIS parcel fabric data is to distinguish the SFAP and CFAP parcel configurations from the legal configurations, to convey the legal parcel configurations. This workflow is in progress. Please be advised that while we endeavor to restore SFAP and CFAP parcels back to their legal configurations in the primary parcel fabric layer, SFAP and CFAP parcels may be distributed throughout the dataset. Parcels that have been restored to their legal configurations, do not reflect the SFAP or CFAP parcel configurations that correspond to the current property tax delineations. We intend for parcel reports and parcel data to capture when a parcel has been separated or combined for assessment purposes, however in some cases, information may not be available in GIS for the SFAP/CFAP status of a parcel configuration shown. For help or questions regarding a parcel’s SFAP/CFAP status, or property survey data, please visit Napa County’s Surveying Services or Property Mapping Information. For more information you can visit our website: When a Parcel is Not a Parcel | Napa County, CA

    Data last synced 08-29-2025 04:24. Data synced on a Weekly interval.

  3. a

    Napa County

    • california-parcel-update-agis.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 28, 2023
    + more versions
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    Advanced GIS Lab (2023). Napa County [Dataset]. https://california-parcel-update-agis.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/napa-county-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 28, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Advanced GIS Lab
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Napa County,
    Description

    Data Source: The data was downloaded from the Napa County, CA GIS catalog. Data was enriched with Fire Hazard Zone, Flood Risk Zone, Fault Zones, Landslide Risk, Liquifaction Zones, Drought Conditions, and the potential for Renewable Energy (Solar Radiation and Wind Speed) layers, in addition to the layers provided by the county. The table schema is detailed below.Name of FieldAliasType of DataDescriptionAPNAPNSTRINGAssessor's Parcel NumberHOUSE_NUMHOUSE NUMINTEGERHouse NumberPREFIX_DIRPREFIX DIRSTRINGPrefix DirectionST_NAMESTREET NAMESTRINGStreet NameST_TYPESTREET TYPESTRINGStreet TypeUNITUNITSTRINGUnitFULL_ADDFULL ADDRESSSTRINGFull AddressFULL_STNAFULL STREET NAMESTRINGFull Street NameCITYCITYSTRINGCityZIP_CODEZIP CODESTRINGZip CodeLAND_USELAND USESTRINGLand Use (County)ZONINGZONINGSTRINGZoningSCAG_LUCOSCAG LANDUSE CODESTRINGLand Use (SCAG Code)SCAG_LUSCAG LANDUSESTRINGLand Use (SCAG)FHSZ_CODEFIRE HZ ZONE CODESTRINGFire Hazard Zone CodeFHSZ_DESCFIRE HZ ZONE DESCSTRINGFire Hazard Zone DescriptionFLO_CODEFLOOD CODESTRINGFlood Risk CodeFLO_DESCFLOOD DESCSTRINGFlood Risk DescriptionFAULTZONEFAULT ZONESTRINGFault ZoneLANDSLIDELANDSLIDESTRINGLandslideLIQ_ZONELIQUIFACTION ZONESTRINGLiquifaction ZoneDROUGHTDROUGHTSTRINGDroughtDRO_DESCDROUGHT DESCSTRINGDrought DescriptionSOL_RADSOLAR RADIATIONDOUBLESolar RadiationWIND_SPWIND SPEEDDOUBLEWind SpeedLAND_VALLAND VALUEDOUBLELand ValueBUI_AREABUILT AREADOUBLEBuilt AreaTAXTAXSTRINGTaxOWNERSHIPOWNERSHIPSTRINGOwnershipAREA_ACAREA ACRESDOUBLEAcresAREA_SQFTAREA SQ FTDOUBLESquare Feet

  4. n

    FHSZ

    • cwpp.napafirewise.org
    Updated Aug 24, 2022
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    Napa Communities Firewise Foundation (2022). FHSZ [Dataset]. https://cwpp.napafirewise.org/maps/77145f9a92eb4454b3a5c98dca2c17ef
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 24, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa Communities Firewise Foundation
    Area covered
    Description

    This map highlights the CAL FIRE fire hazard severity zones.The goal of this mapping effort is to create more accurate fire hazard zone designations such that mitigation strategies are implemented in areas where hazards warrant these investments. The fire hazard zones will provide specific designation for application of defensible space and building standards consistent with known mechanisms of fire risk to people, property, and natural resources.This dataset provides zones in SRA, as adopted by CAL FIRE on November 7, 2007

  5. c

    Garbage Zone

    • gisdata.countyofnapa.org
    Updated Oct 31, 2005
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    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2005). Garbage Zone [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/garbage-zone
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 31, 2005
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    The County of Napa has several garbage and recycling zones identifying service areas for garbage and recycling pickup. Service providers (solid waste and recycling contractors, garbage haulers) have franchise agreements that provide residential and commercial solid waste, recyclables, and green waste throughout areas of the unincorporated County. This contract layer identifies the area of the County comprised of Garbage Zone 1. An area approximately from southern Yountville, south to the Solano County border, excluding the City of Napa and City of American Canyon. The layer will allow the identifications of lands, property, businesses that would be included in Garbage Zone 1 and be provided the solid waste and recycling services identified in County Agreement # 6431. The County has an exclusive franchise agreement (#6431) with Napa County Recycling and Waste Services until November 2015 with a possible option of up to four one (1) year extensions.

    Data last synced 02-03-2025 06:07. Data synced on a Monthly interval.

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Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online (2023). Parcels Public [Dataset]. https://gisdata.countyofnapa.org/datasets/parcels-public-1

Parcels Public

Explore at:
121 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Aug 15, 2023
Dataset authored and provided by
Napa County GIS | ArcGIS Online
License

ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically

Area covered
Description

Internal view of the parcel layer. This view contains all the attributes that can be seen by County employees.There are approximately 51,300 real property parcels in Napa County. Parcels delineate the approximate boundaries of property ownership as described in Napa County deeds, filed maps, and other source documents. GIS parcel boundaries are maintained by the Information Technology Services GIS team. Assessor Parcel Maps are created and maintained by the Assessor Division Mapping Section. Each parcel has an Assessor Parcel Number (APN) that is its unique identifier. The APN is the link to various Napa County databases containing information such as owner name, situs address, property value, land use, zoning, flood data, and other related information. Data for this map service is sourced from the Napa County Parcels dataset which is updated nightly with any recent changes made by the mapping team. There may at times be a delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel boundary configuration and corresponding information is available in the online GIS parcel viewer.From 1850 to early 1900s assessor staff wrote the name of the property owner and the property value on map pages. They began using larger maps, called “tank maps” because of the large steel cabinet they were kept in, organized by school district (before unification) on which names and values were written. In the 1920s, the assessor kept large books of maps by road district on which names were written. In the 1950s, most county assessors contracted with the State Board of Equalization for board staff to draw standardized 11x17 inch maps following the provisions of Assessor Handbook 215. Maps were originally drawn on linen. By the 1980’s Assessor maps were being drawn on mylar rather than linen. In the early 1990s Napa County transitioned from drawing on mylar to creating maps in AutoCAD. When GIS arrived in Napa County in the mid-1990s, the AutoCAD images were copied over into the GIS parcel layer. Sidwell, an independent consultant, was then contracted by the Assessor’s Office to convert these APN files into the current seamless ArcGIS parcel fabric for the entire County. Beginning with the 2024-2025 assessment roll, the maps are being drawn directly in the parcel fabric layer.Parcels in the GIS parcel fabric are drawn according to the legal description using coordinate geometry (COGO) drawing tools and various reference data such as Public Lands Survey section boundaries and road centerlines. The legal descriptions are not defined by the GIS parcel fabric. Any changes made in the GIS parcel fabric via official records, filed maps, and other source documents are uploaded overnight. There is always at least a 6-month delay between when a document is recorded and when the new parcel configuration and corresponding information is available in the online parcel viewer for search or download.Parcel boundary accuracy can vary significantly, with errors ranging from a few feet to several hundred feet. These distortions are caused by several factors such as: the map projection - the error derived when a spherical coordinate system model is projected into a planar coordinate system using the local projected coordinate system; and the ground to grid conversion - the distortion between ground survey measurements and the virtual grid measurements. The aim of the parcel fabric is to construct a visual interpretation that is adequate for basic geographic understanding. This digital data is intended for illustration and demonstration purposes only and is not considered a legal resource, nor legally authoritative.SFAP & CFAP DISCLAIMER: Per the California Code, RTC 606. some legal parcels may have been combined for assessment purposes (CFAP) or separated for assessment purposes (SFAP) into multiple parcels for a variety of tax assessment reasons. SFAP and CFAP parcels are assigned their own APN number and primarily result from a parcel being split by a tax rate area boundary, due to a recorded land use lease, or by request of the property owner. Assessor parcel (APN) maps reflect when parcels have been separated or combined for assessment purposes, and are one legal entity. The goal of the GIS parcel fabric data is to distinguish the SFAP and CFAP parcel configurations from the legal configurations, to convey the legal parcel configurations. This workflow is in progress. Please be advised that while we endeavor to restore SFAP and CFAP parcels back to their legal configurations in the primary parcel fabric layer, SFAP and CFAP parcels may be distributed throughout the dataset. Parcels that have been restored to their legal configurations, do not reflect the SFAP or CFAP parcel configurations that correspond to the current property tax delineations. We intend for parcel reports and parcel data to capture when a parcel has been separated or combined for assessment purposes, however in some cases, information may not be available in GIS for the SFAP/CFAP status of a parcel configuration shown. For help or questions regarding a parcel’s SFAP/CFAP status, or property survey data, please visit Napa County’s Surveying Services or Property Mapping Information. For more information you can visit our website: When a Parcel is Not a Parcel | Napa County, CA

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