This layer is sourced from lacitydbs.org.
This layer contains Legal City boundaries within Los Angeles County. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Works provides the most current shape file of these city boundaries for download at its Spatial Information Library.Note: This boundary layer will not line up with the Thomas Brothers city layer. Principal attributes include:CITY_NAME: represents the city's name.CITY_TYPE: may be used for definition queries; "Unincorporated" or "City".FEAT_TYPE: contains the type of feature each polygon represents:Land - Use this value for your definition query if you want to see only land features on your map.Pier - One example is the Santa Monica Pier. Man-made features may be regarded as extensions of the coastline.Breakwater - Examples include the breakwater barriers that protect the Los Angeles Harbor.Water - Polygons with this attribute value represent internal navigable waters. Examples of internal waters are found in the Long Beach Harbor and in Marina del Rey.3NM Buffer - Per the Submerged Lands Act, the seaward boundaries of coastal cities and unincorporated county areas are three nautical miles (a nautical mile is 1852 meters) from the coastline.
Polygon vector map data covering boundaries for the City of Los Angeles containing 4 features.
Boundary GIS (Geographic Information System) data is spatial information that delineates the geographic boundaries of specific geographic features. This data typically includes polygons representing the outlines of these features, along with attributes such as names, codes, and other relevant information.
Boundary GIS data is used for a variety of purposes across multiple industries, including urban planning, environmental management, public health, transportation, and business analysis.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
City Boundary
LADOT automated and manual traffic count summary data for intersections throughout Los Angeles. Manual counts ("MAN" under the "Type" column) are generally 6-hr counts which have been expanded using a conversion factor.
All buildings over 64 square feet in City of Los Angeles captured through LARIAC4 4" and 1' imagery. LARIAC4 guide: https://lariac-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/pages/lariac4-documents-dataCountywide Building Outlines download available from LA County at: https://data.lacounty.gov/maps/57f5fc977d6a427a978003a6229ab5e7/aboutData is from 2014.
** Download as File GeodatabaseThe Countywide building outline dataset contains building outlines (over 3,000,000) for all buildings in Los Angeles County, including building height, and building area (also known as building footprints). This data was initially captured from stereo imagery as part of the LARIAC2 Project (2008 acquisition) and was updated as part of the LARIAC4 (2014), LARIAC5 (2017) and LARIAC6 (2020) imagery acquisition.Most of the buildings in this dataset were generated using stereo imagery. This means that the person capturing the buildings actually saw them in 3-D, and therefore was able to more accurately capture the location of the roof line, since this method eliminated the impacts of building lean (where the height of the building impacts its apparent location). Basically this is the most accurate method for capturing building outlines. In many cases the location is more accurate than our aerial photography and parcel boundaries.This file contains a file geodatabase which has two feature classes:LARIAC6_BUILDINGS_2020 – this is the current set of buildings as of 2020LARIAC5_BUILDINGS_DELETED_2020 – these are the buildings from LARIAC5 that have been modified or deleted. These can be for change analysis and detection.
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Ground-motion records from aftershocks of the 1994 Northridge earthquake and main-shock records from the 1971 San Fernando, 1987 Whittier Narrows, 1991 Sierra Madre, and 1994 Northridge earthquakes are used to estimate site response in the urban Los Angeles, California, area. Two frequency bands are considered, 0.5-1.5 Hz and 2.0-6.0 Hz. Instrument characteristics prevented going to lower frequencies, and frequencies above 6.0 Hz are less important to the building inventory. Site response determined at the instrumented locations is associated with the surficial geology and contoured to produce a continuous spatial estimation of site response. The maps in this report are preliminary and will evolve as more data become available and more analysis is done.
** Download as File GeodatabaseThe Countywide building outline dataset contains building outlines (over 3,000,000) for all buildings in Los Angeles County, including building height, building area, and the parcel number (also known as building footprints). This data was captured from stereo imagery as part of the LARIAC2 Project (2008 acquisition) and was updated as part of the LARIAC4 (2014) imagery acquisition. There are a number of sources. All buildings were updated to include changes between 2008 and 2014.
City of Palmdale - building outlines from the LARIAC (2006) imagery derived from orthogonal imagery. City of Pasadena - building outlines from earlier imagery, updated with LARIAC2 (2008) imagery in 2008 City of Glendale - building outlines from earlier imagery, updated with LARIAC2 (2008) imagery in 2008 City of Los Angeles - building outlines from LARIAC2 (2008), stereo generated, for all buildings > 64 square feet The rest of the County - building outlines from LARIAC2 (2008), stereo generated, for all buildings > 400 square feet Most of the buildings in this dataset were generated using stereo imagery. This means that the person capturing the buildings actually saw them in 3-D, and therefore was able to more accurately capture the location of the roof line, since this method eliminated the impacts of building lean (where the height of the building impacts its apparent location). Basically this is the most accurate method for capturing building outlines. In many cases the location is more accurate than our aerial photography and parcel boundaries.This file contains a file geodatabase which has two feature classes:
LARIAC4_BUILDINGS_2014 – this is the current set of buildings as of 2014 LARIAC2_BUILDINGS_DELETED_2014 – these are the buildings from LARIAC2 that have been modified or deleted. These can be for change analysis and detection.
IntroductionThis metadata is broken up into different sections that provide both a high-level summary of the Housing Element and more detailed information about the data itself with links to other resources. The following is an excerpt from the Executive Summary from the Housing Element 2021 – 2029 document:The County of Los Angeles is required to ensure the availability of residential sites, at adequate densities and appropriate development standards, in the unincorporated Los Angeles County to accommodate its share of the regional housing need--also known as the Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA). Unincorporated Los Angeles County has been assigned a RHNA of 90,052 units for the 2021-2029 Housing Element planning period, which is subdivided by level of affordability as follows:Extremely Low / Very Low (<50% AMI) - 25,648Lower (50 - 80% AMI) - 13,691Moderate (80 - 120% AMI) - 14,180Above Moderate (>120% AMI) - 36,533Total - 90,052NOTES - Pursuant to State law, the projected need of extremely low income households can be estimated at 50% of the very low income RHNA. Therefore, the County’s projected extremely low income can be estimated at 12,824 units. However, for the purpose of identifying adequate sites for RHNA, no separate accounting of sites for extremely low income households is required. AMI = Area Median IncomeDescriptionThe Sites Inventory (Appendix A) is comprised of vacant and underutilized sites within unincorporated Los Angeles County that are zoned at appropriate densities and development standards to facilitate housing development. The Sites Inventory was developed specifically for the County of Los Angeles, and has built-in features that filter sites based on specific criteria, including access to transit, protection from environmental hazards, and other criteria unique to unincorporated Los Angeles County. Other strategies used within the Sites Inventory analysis to accommodate the County’s assigned RHNA of 90,052 units include projected growth of ADUs, specific plan capacity, selected entitled projects, and capacity or planned development on County-owned sites within cities. This accounts for approximately 38 percent of the RHNA. The remaining 62 percent of the RHNA is accommodated by sites to be rezoned to accommodate higher density housing development (Appendix B).Caveats:This data is a snapshot in time, generally from the year 2021. It contains information about parcels, zoning and land use policy that may be outdated. The Department of Regional Planning will be keeping an internal tally of sites that get developed or rezoned to meet our RHNA goals, and we may, in the future, develop some public facing web applications or dashboards to show the progress. There may even be periodic updates to this GIS dataset as well, throughout this 8-year planning cycle.Update History:1/7/25 - Following the completion of the annexation to the City of Whittier on 11/12/24, 27 parcels were removed along Whittier Blvd which contained 315 Very Low Income units and 590 Above Moderate units. Following a joint County-City resolution of the RHNA transfer to the city, 247 Very Low Income units and 503 Above Moderate units were taken on by Whittier. 10/16/24 - Modifications were made to this layer during the updates to the South Bay and Westside Area Plans following outreach in these communities. In the Westside Planning area, 29 parcels were removed and no change in zoning / land use policy was proposed; 9 Mixed Use sites were added. In the South Bay, 23 sites were removed as they no longer count towards the RHNA, but still partially changing to Mixed Use.5/31/22 – Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors adopted the Housing Element on 5/17/22, and it received final certification from the State of California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) on 5/27/22. Data layer published on 5/31/22.Links to other resources:Department of Regional Planning Housing Page - Contains Housing Element and it's AppendicesHousing Element Update - Rezoning Program Story Map (English, and Spanish)Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) - Regional Housing Needs AssessmentCalifornia Department of Housing and Community Development Housing Element pageField Descriptions:OBJECTID - Internal GIS IDAIN - Assessor Identification Number*SitusAddress - Site Address (Street and Number) from Assessor Data*Use Code - Existing Land Use Code (corresponds to Use Type and Use Description) from Assessor Data*Use Type - Existing Land Use Type from Assessor Data*Use Description - Existing Land Use Description from Assessor Data*Vacant / Nonvacant – Parcels that are vacant or non-vacant per the Use Code from the Assessor Data*Units Total - Total Existing Units from Assessor Data*Max Year - Maximum Year Built from Assessor Data*Supervisorial District (2021) - LA County Board of Supervisor DistrictSubmarket Area - Inclusionary Housing Submarket AreaPlanning Area - Planning Areas from the LA County Department of Regional Planning General Plan 2035Community Name - Unincorporated Community NamePlan Name - Land Use Plan Name from the LA County Department of Regional Planning (General Plan and Area / Community Plans)LUP - 1 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 1 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 2 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*LUP - 3 (% area) - Land Use Policy from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Land Use Policy (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one Land Use Policy category present)*Current LUP (Description) – This is a brief description of the land use category. In the case of multiple land uses, this would be the land use category that covers the majority of the parcel*Current LUP (Min Density - net or gross) - Minimum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaCurrent LUP (Max Density - net or gross) - Maximum density for this category (as net or gross) per the Land Use Plan for this areaProposed LUP – Final – The proposed land use category to increase density.Proposed LUP (Description) – Brief description of the proposed land use policy.Prop. LUP – Final (Min Density) – Minimum density for the proposed land use category.Prop. LUP – Final (Max Density) – Maximum density for the proposed land use category.Zoning - 1 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 1 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Primary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 2 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Secondary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Zoning - 3 (% area) - Zoning from Dept. of Regional Planning - Tertiary Zone (% of parcel covered in cases where there are more than one zone category present)*Current Zoning (Description) - This is a brief description of the zoning category. In the case of multiple zoning categories, this would be the zoning that covers the majority of the parcel*Proposed Zoning – Final – The proposed zoning category to increase density.Proposed Zoning (Description) – Brief description of the proposed zoning.Acres - Acreage of parcelMax Units Allowed - Total Proposed Land Use Policy UnitsRHNA Eligible? – Indicates whether the site is RHNA Eligible or not. NOTE: This layer only shows those that are RHNA Eligible, but internal versions of this layer also show sites that were not-RHNA eligible, or removed during the development of this layer in 2020 – 2022.Very Low Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Very Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementLow Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Low Income level as defined in the Housing ElementModerate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementAbove Moderate Income Capacity - Total capacity for the Above Moderate Income level as defined in the Housing ElementRealistic Capacity - Total Realistic Capacity of parcel (totaling all income levels). Several factors went into this final calculation. See the Housing Element (Links to Other Resources above) in the following locations - "Sites Inventory - Lower Income RHNA" (p. 223), and "Rezoning - Very Low / Low Income RHNA" (p231).Income Categories - Income Categories assigned to the parcel (relates to income capacity units)Lot Consolidation ID - Parcels with a unique identfier for consolidation potential (based on parcel ownership)Lot Consolidation Notes - Specific notes for consolidationConsolidation - Adjacent Parcels - All adjacent parcels that are tied to each lot consolidation IDsShape_Length - Perimeter (feet)Shape_Area - Area (sq feet)*As it existed in 2021
** Download as File GeodatabaseThe Countywide building outline dataset contains building outlines (over 3,000,000) for all buildings in Los Angeles County, including building height, and building area (also known as building footprints). This data was captured from stereo imagery as part of the LARIAC2 Project (2008 acquisition) and was updated as part of the LARIAC4 (2014) & LARIAC5 (2017) imagery acquisition.Most of the buildings in this dataset were generated using stereo imagery. This means that the person capturing the buildings actually saw them in 3-D, and therefore was able to more accurately capture the location of the roof line, since this method eliminated the impacts of building lean (where the height of the building impacts its apparent location). Basically this is the most accurate method for capturing building outlines. In many cases the location is more accurate than our aerial photography and parcel boundaries.This file contains a file geodatabase which has two feature classes:LARIAC5_BUILDINGS_2017 – this is the current set of buildings as of 2017LARIAC4_BUILDINGS_DELETED_2017 – these are the buildings from LARIAC4 that have been modified or deleted. These can be for change analysis and detection.
Proposed Zoning for the East San Gabriel Valley Area Plan update. This is the proposed layer following several months of collaborative updates. This layer shows the proposed zoning and the change areas and represents the final data as adopted by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on 5/21/24. For more information about the project, please click here.UPDATED - 7/26/23 for latest zoning changes.
no abstract provided
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Staging areas provide parking and access to the County's regional trail system. This feature class contains information in regards to parking and other amenities within each staging area. Trail access points in the "Trail Point Features" feature class are related to a staging area through their "Staging Area ID".Polygon features were post processed to align with LARIAC Imagery.
The Countywide building outline dataset contains building outlines (over 3,000,000) for all buildings in Los Angeles County, including building height, building area, and the parcel number (also known as building footprints). This data was captured from stereo imagery as part of the LAR-IAC2 Project (2008 acquisition) and was updated as part of the LARIAC4 (2014) imagery acquisition.There are a number of sources. All buildings were updated to include changes between 2008 and 2014.City of Los Angeles – building outlines from LAR-IAC2 (2008), stereo generated, for all buildings > 64 square feetThe rest of the County – building outlines from LAR-IAC2 (2008), stereo generated, for all buildings > 400 square feetMost of the buildings in this dataset were generated using stereo imagery. This means that the person capturing the buildings actually saw them in 3-D, and therefore was able to more accurately capture the location of the roof line, since this method eliminated the impacts of building lean (where the height of the building impacts its apparent location). Basically – this is the most accurate method for capturing building outlines. In many cases the location is more accurate than our aerial photography and parcel boundaries.
Link to the ScienceBase Item Summary page for the item described by this metadata record. Service Protocol: Link to the ScienceBase Item Summary page for the item described by this metadata record. Application Profile: Web Browser. Link Function: information
** Download as File GeodatabaseThe Countywide building outline dataset contains building outlines (over 3,000,000) for all buildings in Los Angeles County, including building height, and building area (also known as building footprints). This data was initially captured from stereo imagery as part of the LARIAC2 Project (2008 acquisition) and was updated as part of the LARIAC4 (2014), LARIAC5 (2017) and LARIAC6 (2020) imagery acquisition.Most of the buildings in this dataset were generated using stereo imagery. This means that the person capturing the buildings actually saw them in 3-D, and therefore was able to more accurately capture the location of the roof line, since this method eliminated the impacts of building lean (where the height of the building impacts its apparent location). Basically this is the most accurate method for capturing building outlines. In many cases the location is more accurate than our aerial photography and parcel boundaries.This file contains a file geodatabase which has two feature classes:LARIAC6_BUILDINGS_2020 – this is the current set of buildings as of 2020LARIAC5_BUILDINGS_DELETED_2020 – these are the buildings from LARIAC5 that have been modified or deleted. These can be for change analysis and detection.
This layer is sourced from lacitydbs.org.