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TwitterMap document to support the map and/or feature services for public, non-restricted National Register of Historic Places spatial data.A current, accurate spatial representation of all historic properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places is of interest to Federal agencies, the National Park Service, State Historic and Tribal Historic Preservation Offices, local government and certified local governments, consultants, academia, and the interested public. This interest stems from the regulatory processes of managing cultural resources that are consistent with the National Historic Preservation Act as Amended (NHPA), the National Environmental Policy Act as Amended, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act, and other laws related to cultural resources. The regulations promulgating these laws require the use of spatial data in support of various decisions and actions related to cultural resource management. Collectively, the National Register geo-spatial dataset is intended to be a comprehensive inventory of all cultural resources that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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TwitterThis feature class describes properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places, classified as historic buildings, object, sites, structures, and districts, and depicted as points. The National Register of Historic Places requires the submission of a single UTM coordinate pair for properties under 10 acres. Attribute data in this dataset are intentionally limited to those necessary for spatial data maintenance and feature level metadata necessary to document the lineage of the geography itself. Data from external database systems, such as the National Register Information System, are intended to link with these data to provide basic feature attributes. The means to maintain unique identifiers for each historic site (CR_ID), Survey_ID, as well as unique geometries associated with that feature (Geometry_ID) are through the use of Globally Unique Identifiers (GUIDs) assigned by the database. Information about the genesis of individual points is documented by feature level metadata fields in the spatial attribute table.
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TwitterA current, accurate spatial representation of all historic properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places is of interest to Federal agencies, the National Park Service, State Historic and Tribal Historic Preservation Offices, local government and certified local governments, consultants, academia, and the interested public. This interest stems from the regulatory processes of managing cultural resources that are consistent with the National Historic Preservation Act as Amended (NHPA), the National Environmental Policy Act as Amended, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act, and other laws related to cultural resources. The regulations promulgating these laws require the use of spatial data in support of various decisions and actions related to cultural resource management. Collectively, the National Register geo-spatial dataset is intended to be a comprehensive inventory of all cultural resources that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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TwitterNJ CRGIS: NJ Cultural Resources GIS Map contains GIS layers for cultural resources maintained by the Historic Preservation Office (HPO). This map was developed for use in the LUCY: NJDEP Cultural Resources Online Viewer web mapping application click here to view. The HPO has defined the following layers to represent cultural resources in GIS applications: Historic District Polygons, Historic Property Polygons, Historic Property Feature Points, and Archaeological Site Grid.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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National Register of Historic Places - PointsThis feature layer, utilizing National Geospatial Data Asset (NGDA) data from the National Park Service, displays the National Register of Historic Places. Per NPS, "The National Register of Historic Places is the official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America's historic and archeological resources."Henni Hall (Historical Point)Data currency: This cached Esri federal service is checked weekly for updates from its enterprise federal source (National Register of Historic Places Points (ID: 0)) and will support mapping, analysis, data exports and OGC API – Feature access.NGDAID: 36 (National Register of Historic Places)OGC API Features Link: National Register of Historic Places - PointsFor more information, please visit: National Register of Historic PlacesFor feedback please contact: Esri_US_Federal_Data@esri.comNGDA Theme CommunityThis data set is part of the NGDA Cultural Resources Theme Community. Per the Federal Geospatial Data Committee (FGDC), Cultural Resources are defined as "features and characteristics of a collection of places of significance in history, architecture, engineering, or society. Includes National Monuments and Icons."For other NGDA Content: Esri Federal Datasets
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TwitterHistoric Properties (Points, Lines). These include State Antiquities Landmarks (SAL), National Historic Landmarks (NHL), National Register of Historic Places Listed and National Register of Historic Places Eligible (NRHP) properties, Recorded Texas Historic Landmarks (RTHL), Texas Centennial Markers, and Contributing properties as well as locally designated resources if available. These features are compiled from various TxDOT and consultant surveys & reports. These determinations are made by the National Park Service or the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO). Historic Districts (Polygons). These include State Antiquities Landmarks (SAL), National Historic Landmarks (NHL), National Register of Historic Places Listed and National Register of Historic Places Eligible (NRHP) properties. Whenever possible, contributing properties and locally designated historic features have also been included. All of these features and their designations are gathered and determined by the National Park Service, the Texas Historical Commission, or through various surveys and reports performed by TxDOT and their consultants. Historic Bridges (Points). These are bridges listed or eligible to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). A bridge that is rare in type, unusual from an engineering perspective, or historically significant because of its location or association with an important event or person may be deemed a historic bridge. This determination is made by the TxDOT Environmental Affairs Division (ENV) in consultation with the State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO). Texas has numerous examples of historic bridges, including metal truss bridges, concrete arch or span bridges, and suspension bridges. Historic Resource Survey Reports (Polygons). HRSRs are mapped for each project's Area of Potential Effect (APE). The APEs are determined by industry standards and/or survey requirements. These map elements are updated approximately once a month to reflect any changes. Bypassed Relocated Bridges (Points). Bridges that have been bypassed or relocated for one reason or another. Many now serve only as pedestrian crossings or exhibits at various local museums. Some bridges were relocated by TxDOT, some by county entities, and still others were handled privately. TxDOT project information is included if available.Update Frequency: Monthly Source: TxDOT Environmental Affairs Division Historic Properties DatabasesSecurity Level: Public
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This layer was developed by the Community Development division at the Atlanta Regional Commission to show national historic districts.Attributes:Name: A description of the resource nameStreets: The streets that create the district boundarySignificance: An identification of the level of significance based on the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards (National Park Service)Survey Name: Identifies the Survey Report that documents that resource. Address: location of the resource, which may be a physical address or an approximate location based on street intersections or other adjacent streetCity: incorporated city in which the resource is located; if the City field is blank, the resource is most likely in an unincorporated areaDate of Construction: the date or range of dates that most closely approximates the original date of construction of the oldest part of the surveyed resource: may not reflect the dates of subsequent additions or improvements; the date of construction is often a “best guest” and may not be accurateCounty: the unincorporated county that the resource is located inSurvey year: the year the survey was undertaken (if identified)National Registry: Listed (identifies resources listed on the National Register of Historic Places); Proposed Not Eligible (identifies resources that have been identified by the surveyor as non-eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places); Proposed Eligible (identifies resources that have been identified by the surveyor as eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, but have not been designated); if no information is given, no determination of eligibility was identified in the recordStyle: An identified architectural style of a resource; there is discretion on the part of the surveyor in identifying styles and conflicts may exist.Source: Multiple sources including GNAHRGIS (maintained by ITOS for the Georgia Department of Transportation); Atlanta Regional Commission; National Park ServiceDate: 2016
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TwitterAn official layer that show location of buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places. This layer is maintained by Omaha Planning Department. You can also check up a story map of the Omaha Historic Properties: https://dogis.org/HistoricPreservation/ Questions? Contact Us
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TwitterHistoric Sites and National Register of Historic Places dataset current as of 1995. Historic districts and properties listed on the national register of historic places. Property line polygons were mannually transferred to paper quad maps and digitized from tablets 1995 updates with on-screen digitizing over RIGIS.
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TwitterHistoric Properties, data from the Metro Landmarks Commission, Kentucky Hertiage Council, and National Register of Historic Places about National Historic Landmarks in Jefferson County, Kentucky. Revision 2 January 2007. View detailed metadata.
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TwitterPolygon dataset representing local New Orleans Historic Districts. Local historic districts are created to regulate, preserve, and protect historic districts and landmarks within the City of New Orleans and may or may not correspond to districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places. As of 2007, there are 14 local historic districts within New Orleans/Orleans Parish, ten administered by the New Orleans Historic District Landmarks Commission and four by the Central Business District Historic District Landmarks Commission. The City of New Orleans Department of Information Technology & Innovation creates, collects and stores GIS infrastructure and other data. Data are provided by various departments within the City, other government entities, utilities, and private enterprise. The primary purpose for maintaining this enterprise GIS is to provide spatial analysis, decision support and mapping services to all City Departments.
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TwitterHistoric Preservation in Santa Monica websiteThe local preservation movement began in earnest as the City of Santa Monica responded to the increased development pressures taking place in Southern California cities during the 1960s and 1970s. The City Council, following the community interest in preserving local landmarks, adopted the Landmarks and Historic District Ordinance on March 24, 1976. City staff works closely with the Landmarks Commission to:Designate Historic Resources at the local levelMaintain a comprehensive Historic Resources Inventory Implement state guidelines regarding historic propertiesDistribute information on Benefits & Tax Incentives for LandmarksReview applications for Certificate of Appropriateness, Certificate of Administrative Approval, Certificate of Exemption, and Certificate of Economic HardshipTypes of DesignationsA historic resource may be a building, structure, site, object, district, or landscape that may be associated with historic events; associated with important historical persons; represent a rare type of historic property; or has architectural quality or importance.Local level designations are handled by the Landmarks Commission. The City’s Landmarks Commission decides whether a property should be a designated Structure of Merit, or Landmark, and makes a recommendation to City Council on Historic District designation, based on certain required findings contained in the Landmarks Ordinance. These official designations are for resources that are considered locally significant historic sites or areas.Historic Resources may also be designated at Federal or State levels. Federal designation is managed by the National Register of Historic Places. Information on State level designations may be obtained through the Office of Historic Preservation.LandmarksLandmarks are considered to have the highest level of individual historical or architectural significance. Therefore, along with contributing buildings located within historic districts, Landmarks are offered the highest protection with respect to alterations and demolitions.Structures of MeritStructures of Merit are historic resources with a more limited degree of individual significance. This designation requires special review for demolition permits.Historic DistrictsHistoric Districts are geographic areas or non-contiguous groupings of thematically related properties significant in that they contribute to the historic character of the area at a local level. Any area in the city can be designated a Historic District subject to the approval of City Council.
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This data includes approximate boundaries for national historic districts in the City of Saint Paul, along with basic information about each district. The boundaries are drawn to be generally accurate, but any questions that involve parcel-by-parcel judgement about where specifically the boundary falls should be resolved by referring to other documentation.Attributes (Fields) Defined:Name: Name of the Historic DistrictHistoric Listing: The level of historic listing (local, state, or national) that applies to this record. All records in this dataset will be (by definition) "national".Year added to National Register of Historic Places: The year that the area was added to the National Register of Historic Places.Year added to State Register of Historic Places: A placeholder field; not applicable to this layer.Year added to Local Heritage Preservation Districts: A placeholder field; not applicable to this layer.Expansion Years: Year the district was expanded.Maintenance and Update Frequency: This data is updated when a new historic district becomes effective, or details about an existing district change.
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TwitterIndividual properties listed in the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places for Lexington-Fayette County, Kentucky. The National Register of Historic Places is the official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America's historic and archeological resources.This GIS dataset was created by the LFUCG GIS Office on behalf of the LFUCG Division of Historic Preservation based on National Register nominations. Boundaries may contain an entire parcel or only a buffer around a specific building.The national register of historic places property boundary data layer is an integral part of the planning data in the Lexington-Fayette-Urban County Government Geographic Information System. This information is used by the Division of Planning in case review, enforcement, and long range planning. GIS data layers are accessed by personnel in most LFUCG divisions for basic applications such as viewing, querying, and map output production.
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This is a polygon data set depicting sites designated by the City of Boise as historic local landmarks and sites registered as historic by the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) within Boise's Area of Impact. Historic landmarks are defined as sites, buildings, structures or objects that possess exceptional significance in history, architecture, engineering, archaeology or culture at the local level and have been designated as an historic landmark through either the public hearing process as defined by the Boise City Historic Preservation Code, Title 11 Section 05-09 of the City Code, or by being listed on the NRHP. The historic landmark polygons represent the area (building(s), parcel(s), or feature(s)) of historic significance for a given site. This data set was developed by Boise Planning and Development Services (PDS) staff based on available documentation of the landmark's representative area. Historic local landmarks are established by City of Boise ordinances; these sites may or may not also be registered as national historic landmarks. Properties that have historic landmarks present are regulated for all building and demolition permits in order to protect the City's historic resources. This data is updated as changes occur to the national registry and the local landmark listing for Boise.For more information, please visit City of Boise Planning and Development Services.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Polygon locations of historic districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places found in Utah. The data includes all National Register Historic Districts listed since 1966, and is updated as new districts are added. Note that properties listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places are not included as part of this dataset. Data was derived by Utah Division of State History staff from physical maps and property descriptions that are part of the National Register Nominations prepared for each district and on file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office.
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TwitterThis application, HistoryQuest DC, is an interactive GIS map that provides historical data on approximately 193,000 extant buildings in Washington, D.C. The map offers several operational layers of information for the user including historic data on individual buildings and historic districts, links to documentation on properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places, information on historic residential subdivisions, and the identification and boundaries of the L’Enfant Plan, and the city’s Squares, and Wards. The featured layer in the map—the Historical Data on DC Buildings—provides information from a variety of sources on original dates of construction, architects, owners and builders of the city’s historic buildings. The application also includes a Query tool that allows the user to analyze the historic data within a specified geographic area or city-wide.This application has evolved out of the DC Historical Building Permits Database, begun in 2002, is on-going. Requests to correct or add new information can be made using the “Propose Data Change” drop-down form located on the banner at the top of the map.For questions or concerns, contact the Historic Preservation Office at historic.preservation@dc.gov.
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TwitterThe Kansas Historic Resources Inventory (KHRI) is a searchable inventory of the state's surveyed historic properties. The initial creation of the online inventory included the scanning and uploading of thousands of paper inventory forms submitted to the Kansas State Historic Preservation Office since the 1960s. These initial records have been edited and supplemented with thousands more digital-born records documenting non-archeological sites and properties across Kansas. This interactive database is intended to serve as an educational and reference tool for preservation professionals and the general public. It is open to the public and actively updated daily. DEMO – Demolished is a building that either was listed, eligible for listing, or determined ineligible that has been demolished.
NOTLISTED – Not Listed is used for buildings determined ineligible for the National Register, or if they had a nomination denied by the National Park Service.
NRC - National Register Contributing is used for historic districts. This is a building that is actively contributing to whatever the historic district is for (black neighborhoods, historic downtown, etc.).
NRNC – National Register Non-Contributing is for districts and is the opposite of the NRC Contributing category. This building, while it may be within the given boundary of the district, is NOT a contributing member of what the historic district is highlighting (like a modern building in a lot among historic downtown buildings).
NRY – National Register is a site that has been successfully added to the National Register.
SRC State Register Contributing and SRNC Non-Contributing operate in a similar way as the National Register version, only just for State Register entries.
SRY – State Register is a site added to the State Register.Acknowledgements – The Kansas Historic Resources Inventory (KHRI) website is updated by members of the public, professional consultants, and staff from the Kansas Historic Preservation Office (SHPO). SHPO staff review submissions routinely, but information on every record has not been completely vetted by an architectural historian or professional historian. Records can be edited at any time. Update frequency - Data within KHRI (the website) is updated daily by staff of the Kansas Historic Preservation Office as well as consultants and members of the public. The website is openly available to public users who may edit records with an active user login. DASC harvests the updated KHRI data and updates this feature service and map on a weekly basis.Agency contact Melinda Dome Archeology Administrative Officer 785-272-8681, ext. 258melinda.dome@ks.gov The full Kansas geospatial catalog is administered by the Kansas Data Access & Support Center (DASC) and can be found at the following URL: https://hub.kansasgis.org/
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TwitterThe Casper Historic Preservation Commission (CHPC) Survey and Registered Historic Places map service provides access to the historic locations and properties within the historic districts of Casper, Wyoming and surrounding Natrona County.
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TwitterThis web map contains data featuring historic resources, districts and historic survey reports (Points, Lines, and Polygons) in Texas. These include State Antiquities Landmarks (SALs, Architecture only), National Historic Landmarks (NHLs), National Register of Historic Places resources (NRHP Listed, NRHP Eligible, Recorded Texas Historic Landmarks (RTHLs), and whenever possible Contributing properties as well as locally designated historic features. Layers for Certified Local Government counties and cities are also included. These features are compiled from a variety of sources including historic resource survey reports conducted by TxDOT historians and outside consultants as well as information provided by the Texas Historical Commission. Update Frequency: MonthlySources: Historic Properties and Districts (PT, LINE, POLY); Historic Bridges of Texas; Historic Resource Survey Reports; TxDOT Projects; Certified Local Government Counties and Cities, South Orient Railroad and Bridges.Security Level: Public
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TwitterMap document to support the map and/or feature services for public, non-restricted National Register of Historic Places spatial data.A current, accurate spatial representation of all historic properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places is of interest to Federal agencies, the National Park Service, State Historic and Tribal Historic Preservation Offices, local government and certified local governments, consultants, academia, and the interested public. This interest stems from the regulatory processes of managing cultural resources that are consistent with the National Historic Preservation Act as Amended (NHPA), the National Environmental Policy Act as Amended, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act, and other laws related to cultural resources. The regulations promulgating these laws require the use of spatial data in support of various decisions and actions related to cultural resource management. Collectively, the National Register geo-spatial dataset is intended to be a comprehensive inventory of all cultural resources that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.