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Below is a non-exhaustive list of planning topics. Developments, plans and policies falling under these broad topics should, as a minimum, consider the datasets listed under the corresponding headings on this page.
Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
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Weekly snapshot of Cleveland City Planning Commission datasets that are featured on the City Planning Zoning Viewer. For the official, most current record of zoning info, use the CPC Zoning Viewer.This file is an open-source geospatial (GIS) format called GeoPackage, which can contain multiple layers. It is similar to Esri's file geodatabase format. Free and open-source GIS software like QGIS, or software like ArcGIS, can read the information to view the tables and map the information.It includes the following mapping layers officially maintained by Cleveland City Planning Commission:Planner Assignment AreasPlanned Unit Development OverlayResidential FacilitiesResidential Facilities 1000 ft. BufferPolice DistrictsLandmarks / Historic LayersLocal Landmark PointsLocal Landmark ParcelsLocal Landmark DistrictsNational Historic DistrictsCentral Business DistrictDesign Review RegionsDesign Review DistrictsOverlay Frontage LinesForm & PRO Overlay DistrictsLive-Work Overlay DistrictsSpecific SetbacksStreet CenterlinesZoningUpdate FrequencyWeekly on Mondays at 4:30 AMContactCity Planning Commission, Zoning & Technology
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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These data describe the planning procedures in their latest known state, specifying their situation in terms of progress and effectiveness. An urban planning procedure lasts on average three years.This description is voluntarily limited to meet a specific objective: show, through summary maps, the geographical distribution and progress of PLU procedures relevant to the management of urban and rural planning policies. These include planning procedures in preparation, revision or repeal. In order to allow an exhaustive summary of the progress of the procedures, the procedures of the past years which have led to urban planning documents which are now enforceable are kept in these data (a planning document is associated with them in the file N_DOCUMENT_URBA_ddd). On the other hand, old urban planning procedures (i.e. those that have resulted in planning documents that are no longer enforceable) and procedures cancelled before their completion are not kept in these data.
N_PROCEDURE_URBA_ZSUP_019
These data describe the planning procedures in their latest known state, specifying their situation in terms of progress and effectiveness. On average, a planning procedure lasts three years.
This description is voluntarily limited to achieve a specific objective: show, through summary maps, the geographical distribution and progress of PLU procedures relevant to the management of urban and rural planning policies. These include planning procedures in preparation, revision or repeal. In order to allow an exhaustive summary of the progress of the procedures, the procedures of the past years which have led to urban planning documents which are now enforceable are kept in these data (a planning document is associated with them in the file N_DOCUMENT_URBA_ddd). On the other hand, old urban planning procedures (i.e. those that have resulted in planning documents that are no longer enforceable) and procedures cancelled before their completion are not kept in these data.
The Puerto Rico Planning Viewer serves as a public facing mapping tool with critical infrastructure and other useful layers like the Advisory Base Flood Elevation (ABFE). This viewer provides an alternative for our partners and stakeholders who don't have GIS capabilities or those that need a quick snapshot for reference.
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Zoning table consisting of the municipal boundaries in which an administrative procedure prepares or revises an urban planning document These data describe the planning procedures in their latest known state, specifying their situation in terms of progress and effectiveness. On average, a planning procedure lasts three years. This description is voluntarily limited to achieve a specific objective: show, through summary maps, the geographical distribution and progress of PLU procedures relevant to the management of urban and rural planning policies. These include planning procedures in preparation, revision or repeal. In order to allow an exhaustive summary of the progress of the procedures, the procedures of the past years which have led to urban planning documents which are now enforceable are kept in these data (a planning document is associated with them in the file N_DOCUMENT_URBA_ddd). On the other hand, old urban planning procedures (i.e. those that have resulted in planning documents that are no longer enforceable) and procedures cancelled before their completion are not kept in these data.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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Report of zoning of enforceable urban planning documents. The data contains the regulatory zoning digitised from the parcelary Bd of the IGN© or the express PCi (based on the geometric elements of the Bd Parcellaire or the express PCi for communal boundaries). The data awarded contain for each digitalised area the name of the zoning in the document and a simplification in 5 levels of aggregation N natural area Agricultural area U urbanised area AUC area to urbanise AUC urbanised area blocked For any application of a regulatory nature, refer to the original documents. This data conforms to the CNIG 2017 standard (http://cnig.gouv.fr/?page_id=2732) in its structure and incorporates data from the POS generalisation table (N_ZONAGE_PLU_S_034) of DDTM 34, developed internally since 1998. This table can be used as a graphical medium for digitalising the zoning of future documents that will need to integrate the Urbanism geoportal. Wms server of the GPU: http://wxs-gpu.mongeoportail.ign.fr/externe/vkd1evhid6jdj5h4hkhyzjto/wms/v?request=GetCapabilities GPU wfs server: http://wxs-gpu.mongeoportail.ign.fr/externe/39wtxmgtn23okfbbs1al2lz3/wfs
This service allows you to browse Sydney Local Environment Plan (LEP) 2012 and Sydney Development Control Plan (DCP) 2012 in an interactive map viewer.For disclaimer and data sources please see toolbar buttons within the application
In the face of changing climate conditions there is an increased concern for the long-term existence of salt marsh ecosystems and how loss will impact shoreline resiliency. As an important shoreline management consideration century-scale salt marsh change is highlighted in this easy-to-use web application. Use this application to view and compare changes in salt marsh from 1933 to 2018. Swipe left or right to change the visible layer in the map frameFilter data to focus on areas of loss or gainSelect features to view total area calculationsMeasure distances between features to estimate horizontal retreatZoom to areas of interest and print maps Turn layers on/off to change visual comparison Both historical and contemporary salt marsh extents are delineated for the ISM planning area in the towns of Provincetown, Truro, Wellfleet and Eastham and areas of salt marsh loss and gain are summarized. The historical delineation is based on 1:10,000 and 1:20,000 scale U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey topographic data from 1933, 1934 and 1938-43. The contemporary delineation is based on photointerpretation and image classification of salt marsh vegetation from 60 cm resolution, 4-band, digital georectified images acquired by the National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP) in August of 2018.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This map contains relevant planning data and is used in the Planning Viewer application on the GeoHub. The map contains the following data: address points, heritage properties, streets, registered two-unit dwellings, building permits, secondary plans, site plan applications, development applications, registered plan of condominium, registered plan of subdivision, committee of adjustment applications, mature neighbourhoods, zoning interim control bylaws, downtown floodplain special policy area, and property lines. All data in the map is public and the majority can be found on the GeoHub available for download.
The surface requirements of the local planning plan (LDP) are digitised in accordance with the national requirements of the CNIG. The requirements of a PLU are defined in Article R123-11 of the Urban Planning Code and are presented in the form of information which appears on the graphic documents of the PLU. A requirement which superimposes on an area of the planning document generally imposes an additional constraint on the settlement of the area. In this dataset are the surface requirements of TYPE 01 (classified wooded spaces) and 05 (reserved spaces) if they appear on the graphic documents of the PLU.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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The regulated zoning of the local planning plan (LDP) is digitised in accordance with the national requirements of the CNIG. The Urban Planning Code defines four types of restricted areas in the PLU (R.123-5 to 8): urban areas (U), areas to be urbanised (AU), agricultural areas (A) and natural and forest areas (N). These areas shall be demarcated on one or more graphic documents. A regulation is attached to each area. The by-law may lay down different rules, depending on whether the purpose of the construction relates to housing, hotel accommodation, offices, commerce, crafts, industry, agricultural or forestry operations or warehouse functions. These categories are restrictive (Art. R.123-9). Areas already urbanised are classified as U areas where existing or under construction public facilities have sufficient capacity to serve the buildings to be installed. The areas of a natural nature of the municipality intended to be opened for urbanisation depending on whether or not the existing facilities on the periphery are sufficient to serve the buildings to be installed may be classified as AU zones. There are two types of AU zone: “constructible” and “inconstructible” AU zones. Areas A may be classified as areas of the municipality, whether or not equipped, to be protected due to the agronomic, organic or economic potential of agricultural land. Areas of the municipality equipped or not may be classified as N zones, to be protected either by reason of the quality of the sites, natural habitats, landscapes and their interest, in particular from the aesthetic, historical or ecological point of view, the existence of forestry or their nature as natural areas. Within zones N, may be demarcated: — areas within which possibilities for the transfer of the right to be built may be carried out (transfer of COS), — areas of limited size and capacity where construction is possible under siting and density conditions.
Attribution 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
Users can browse the map interactively or search by lot ID or address. Available basemaps include aerial images, topographic contours, roads, town landmarks, conserved lands, and individual property boundaries. Overlays display landuse, zoning, flood, water resources, and soil characteristics in relation to neighborhoods or parcels. Integration with Google Street View offers enhanced views of the 2D map location. Other functionality includes map markup, printing, viewing the property record card, and links to official tax maps where available.NRPC's implementation of MapGeo dates back to 2013, however it is the decades of foundational GIS data development at NRPC and partner agencies that has enabled its success. NRPC refreshes the assessing data yearly; the map data is maintained in an ongoing manner.
Open the Data Resource: https://cicgis.org/portal/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=bdf7ca3e249a40fd9a9d83d6e16100ea This viewer contains the latest Land Use/Land Cover and Land Cover datasets created by the Chesapeake Conservancy, U.S. Geological Survey and University of Vermont Spatial Analysis Lab. Its swipe feature supports comparisons between the two layers. Learn more about the Land Use/Land Cover Data Project on the Chesapeake Conservancy website: https://www.chesapeakeconservancy.org/projects/cbp-land-use-land-cover-data-project
The informational perimeters of the local planning plan (LDP) are digitised in accordance with the national requirements of the CNIG. They represent the geographical information added either for regulatory reasons or for information purposes: — the information required to be annexed to the planning documents in accordance with Articles R123-13 and R123-14 of the Urban Planning Code; — information reported on graphical documents for information purposes. In this dataset you will find information on TYPE 04 (Urban Preemption Right Perimeters) and 05 (Deferred Development Areas) if they appear on the PLU graphic documents.
The surface requirements of the local planning plan (LDP) are digitised in accordance with the national requirements of the CNIG. The requirements of a PLU are defined in Article R123-11 of the Urban Planning Code and are presented in the form of information which appears on the graphic documents of the PLU. A requirement which superimposes on an area of the planning document generally imposes an additional constraint on the settlement of the area. In this dataset are the surface requirements of TYPE 01 (classified wooded spaces) and 05 (reserved spaces) if they appear on the graphic documents of the PLU.
This application is intended to aid town staff with limited Map Viewer experience who desire to print a basic map utilizing project data within the planning area. The options available are very limited, if you desire a more sophisticated map or the ability to change the symbology of features, please use the Map Viewer to create and print your map. First, choose the data layers you would like to add to the map, layers can be from the Outer Cape Data Portal, ArcGIS Online or local files stored on your computer. Next, select the basemap of your choice. Then, adjust the transparency of overlapping layers and add additional graphic elements (markers, coordinates, distance measurements, shapes). Finally, print your map.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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🇫🇷 프랑스
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Below is a non-exhaustive list of planning topics. Developments, plans and policies falling under these broad topics should, as a minimum, consider the datasets listed under the corresponding headings on this page.