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NYC Open Data is an opportunity to engage New Yorkers in the information that is produced and used by City government. We believe that every New Yorker can benefit from Open Data, and Open Data can benefit from every New Yorker. Source: https://opendata.cityofnewyork.us/overview/
Thanks to NYC Open Data, which makes public data generated by city agencies available for public use, and Citi Bike, we've incorporated over 150 GB of data in 5 open datasets into Google BigQuery Public Datasets, including:
Over 8 million 311 service requests from 2012-2016
More than 1 million motor vehicle collisions 2012-present
Citi Bike stations and 30 million Citi Bike trips 2013-present
Over 1 billion Yellow and Green Taxi rides from 2009-present
Over 500,000 sidewalk trees surveyed decennially in 1995, 2005, and 2015
This dataset is deprecated and not being updated.
Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.
https://opendata.cityofnewyork.us/
This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - https://data.cityofnewyork.us/ - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.
By accessing datasets and feeds available through NYC Open Data, the user agrees to all of the Terms of Use of NYC.gov as well as the Privacy Policy for NYC.gov. The user also agrees to any additional terms of use defined by the agencies, bureaus, and offices providing data. Public data sets made available on NYC Open Data are provided for informational purposes. The City does not warranty the completeness, accuracy, content, or fitness for any particular purpose or use of any public data set made available on NYC Open Data, nor are any such warranties to be implied or inferred with respect to the public data sets furnished therein.
The City is not liable for any deficiencies in the completeness, accuracy, content, or fitness for any particular purpose or use of any public data set, or application utilizing such data set, provided by any third party.
Banner Photo by @bicadmedia from Unplash.
On which New York City streets are you most likely to find a loud party?
Can you find the Virginia Pines in New York City?
Where was the only collision caused by an animal that injured a cyclist?
What’s the Citi Bike record for the Longest Distance in the Shortest Time (on a route with at least 100 rides)?
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TwitterA listing of all retail food stores which are licensed by the Department of Agriculture and Markets.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This dataset compiles a comprehensive database containing 90,327 street segments in New York City, covering their street design features, streetscape design, Vision Zero treatments, and neighborhood land use. It has two scales-street and street segment group (aggregation of same type of street at neighborhood). This dataset is derived based on all publicly available data, most from NYC Open Data. The detailed methods can be found in the published paper, Pedestrian and Car Occupant Crash Casualties Over a 9-Year Span of Vision Zero in New York City. To use it, please refer to the metadata file for more information and cite our work. A full list of raw data source can be found below:
Motor Vehicle Collisions – NYC Open Data: https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Public-Safety/Motor-Vehicle-Collisions-Crashes/h9gi-nx95
Citywide Street Centerline (CSCL) – NYC Open Data: https://data.cityofnewyork.us/City-Government/NYC-Street-Centerline-CSCL-/exjm-f27b
NYC Building Footprints – NYC Open Data: https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Housing-Development/Building-Footprints/nqwf-w8eh
Practical Canopy for New York City: https://zenodo.org/record/6547492
New York City Bike Routes – NYC Open Data: https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Transportation/New-York-City-Bike-Routes/7vsa-caz7
Sidewalk Widths NYC (originally from Sidewalk – NYC Open Data): https://www.sidewalkwidths.nyc/
LION Single Line Street Base Map - The NYC Department of City Planning (DCP): https://www.nyc.gov/site/planning/data-maps/open-data/dwn-lion.page
NYC Planimetric Database Median – NYC Open Data: https://data.cityofnewyork.us/Transportation/NYC-Planimetrics/wt4d-p43d
NYC Vision Zero Open Data (including multiple datasets including all the implementations): https://www.nyc.gov/content/visionzero/pages/open-data
NYS Traffic Data - New York State Department of Transportation Open Data: https://data.ny.gov/Transportation/NYS-Traffic-Data-Viewer/7wmy-q6mb
Smart Location Database - US Environmental Protection Agency: https://www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/smart-location-mapping
Race and ethnicity in area - American Community Survey (ACS): https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs
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TwitterThe Capital Projects Database reports information at the project level on discrete capital investments from the Capital Commitment Plan.Each row is uniquely identified by its Financial Management Service (FMS) ID, and contains data pertaining to the sponsoring and managing agency.
To explore the data, please visit Capital Planning Explorer
For additional information, please visit A Guide to The Capital Budget
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Twitterhttps://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data/blob/master/LICENSEhttps://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data/blob/master/LICENSE
The New York Times is releasing a series of data files with cumulative counts of coronavirus cases in the United States, at the state and county level, over time. We are compiling this time series data from state and local governments and health departments in an attempt to provide a complete record of the ongoing outbreak.
Since the first reported coronavirus case in Washington State on Jan. 21, 2020, The Times has tracked cases of coronavirus in real time as they were identified after testing. Because of the widespread shortage of testing, however, the data is necessarily limited in the picture it presents of the outbreak.
We have used this data to power our maps and reporting tracking the outbreak, and it is now being made available to the public in response to requests from researchers, scientists and government officials who would like access to the data to better understand the outbreak.
The data begins with the first reported coronavirus case in Washington State on Jan. 21, 2020. We will publish regular updates to the data in this repository.
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TwitterThe NYC Women's Resource Network is a free, user-friendly database of over 1,000 nonprofit organizations and governmental agencies that work to advance and benefit women and families in New York City. A user can tailor their search by keyword, category, and/or borough to receive a customized listing of organizations that address their needs.
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TwitterThe Database of Economic Incentives (DOEI) is a public, searchable database for various economic development projects that Empire State Development (ESD) administers.
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TwitterPlanimetric basemap polygon layer containing parking lot features. Please see the following link for additional documentation- https://github.com/CityOfNewYork/nyc-planimetrics/blob/master/Capture_Rules.md.
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.NY.US Whois Database, discover comprehensive ownership details, registration dates, and more for .NY.US TLD with Whois Data Center.
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TwitterThe NYC Department of City Planning’s (DCP) Housing Database contains all NYC Department of Buildings (DOB) approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. It includes the three primary construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions, and can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space. Records in the Housing Database Project-Level Files are geocoded to the greatest level of precision possible, subject to numerous quality assurance and control checks, recoded for usability, and joined to other housing data sources relevant to city planners and analysts. Data are updated semiannually, at the end of the second and fourth quarters of each year. Please see DCP’s annual Housing Production Snapshot summarizing findings from the 21Q4 data release here. Additional Housing and Economic analyses are also available. The NYC Department of City Planning’s (DCP) Housing Database Unit Change Summary Files provide the net change in Class A housing units since 2010, and the count of units pending completion for commonly used political and statistical boundaries (Census Block, Census Tract, City Council district, Community District, Community District Tabulation Area (CDTA), Neighborhood Tabulation Area (NTA). These tables are aggregated from the DCP Housing Database Project-Level Files, which is derived from Department of Buildings (DOB) approved housing construction and demolition jobs filed or completed in NYC since January 1, 2010. Net housing unit change is calculated as the sum of all three construction job types that add or remove residential units: new buildings, major alterations, and demolitions. These files can be used to determine the change in legal housing units across time and space.
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TwitterData collecting by local state and local health agencies. Compiled and visualized by The New York Times.
This is the US Coronavirus data repository from The New York Times here U.S. coronavirus interactive site. This data includes COVID-19 cases and deaths reported by state and county. The New York Times compiled this data based on reports from state and local health agencies. More information on the data repository is available. For additional reporting and data visualizations, see The New York Times’ Interactive coronavirus data tool.
Data source: https://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data
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TwitterThe New York State Department of Health (NYS DOH) shares de-identified and aggregated metrics on the NYS Medicaid program through the Health Data NY catalog and as summary statistics on DOH website. Datasets vary by subject/scope, unit of analysis, years of data collection, and update frequency. Publicly-available datasets in the Health Data NY catalog address topics including:
For a fee, researchers at NYU Langone Health may acquire NYS Medicaid claims data by submitting a study proposal to the Health Evaluation and Analytics Lab (HEAL). For more information, click on the link to the NYS Medicaid Claims File under the Related Datasets section or search for the NYS Medicaid Claims File in the NYU Data Catalog.
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TwitterThis data package shows the information on hospital discharges at patient-level data with basic record details without showing protected health information (PHI) and was made not identifiable. The data is classified by Health Service Area and county.
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TwitterA list of all datasets that were identified for publication on NYC Open Data and their current release status. For comprehensive information on each dataset currently on NYC Open Data, please refer to Local Law 251 of 2017: Published Data Asset Inventory.
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Twitterhttps://www.ibisworld.com/about/termsofuse/https://www.ibisworld.com/about/termsofuse/
The Database & Directory Publishing industry in New York is expected to decline an annualized -x% to $x.x million over the five years to 2025, while the national industry will likely decline at -x.x% during the same period. Industry establishments decreased an annualized -x.x% to xx locations. Industry employment has decreased an annualized -x.x% to x,xxx workers, while industry wages have decreased an annualized -x.x% to $x.x million.
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TwitterNOTE: To review the latest plan, make sure to filter the "Report Year" column to the latest year.
Data on public websites maintained by or on behalf of the city agencies.
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TwitterAll curbs between roadbed pavement and other surfaces (i.e., within the street right-of-way) were captured. Please see the following link for additional documentation- https://github.com/CityOfNewYork/nyc-planimetrics/blob/master/Capture_Rules.md.
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Context
The dataset tabulates the New York population by gender and age. The dataset can be utilized to understand the gender distribution and demographics of New York.
The dataset constitues the following two datasets across these two themes
Good to know
Margin of Error
Data in the dataset are based on the estimates and are subject to sampling variability and thus a margin of error. Neilsberg Research recommends using caution when presening these estimates in your research.
Custom data
If you do need custom data for any of your research project, report or presentation, you can contact our research staff at research@neilsberg.com for a feasibility of a custom tabulation on a fee-for-service basis.
Neilsberg Research Team curates, analyze and publishes demographics and economic data from a variety of public and proprietary sources, each of which often includes multiple surveys and programs. The large majority of Neilsberg Research aggregated datasets and insights is made available for free download at https://www.neilsberg.com/research/.
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United States CCI: New York data was reported at 79.000 1985=100 in Apr 2025. This records a decrease from the previous number of 89.900 1985=100 for Mar 2025. United States CCI: New York data is updated monthly, averaging 84.000 1985=100 from Feb 2007 (Median) to Apr 2025, with 219 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 132.800 1985=100 in Nov 2018 and a record low of 17.800 1985=100 in Feb 2009. United States CCI: New York data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by The Conference Board. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.H049: Consumer Confidence Index. [COVID-19-IMPACT]
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TwitterThis is the Open Data Program Overview.