Areas included: Bedford County, Botetourt County, Craig County, Floyd County, Franklin County, Montgomery County, Roanoke City, Roanoke County, and Salem City
Current land record data and property values from Roanoke City's Real Estate office
Publication Year: 23 AUG 2011 (last updated)Associated Layers:Annotation:Shared boundaries: voting precinctsAssociated Applications:GIS Website: Supermap, Real Estate GIS AGSMashup website:Pictometry:New Real Estate GISOriginal Source(optional):Responsible Dept: Registrars Office
Land records and property values as of December 05, 2019. This is historical data.
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License information was derived automatically
Census Block is the smallest geographic unit used by the United States Census Bureau for tabulation of 100-percent data (data collected from all houses, rather than a sample of houses). The number of blocks in the United States, including Puerto Rico, for the 2010 Census was 11,155,486.Census blocks are grouped into block groups, which are grouped into census tracts. There are on average about 39 blocks per block group. Blocks typically have a four-digit number; the first number indicates which block group the block is in. For example, census block 3019 would be in block group 3.Blocks are typically bounded by streets, roads or creeks. In cities, a census block may correspond to a city block, but in rural areas where there are fewer roads, blocks may be limited by other features. The population of a census block varies greatly. As of the 2010 census, there were 4,871,270 blocks with a reported population of zero, while a block that is entirely occupied by an apartment complex might have several hundred inhabitants. Census blocks covering the entire country were introduced with the 1990 census. Before that, back to the 1940 census, only selected areas were divided into blocks. Census blocks are maintained within the Administration Feature and is dissolved out weekly. Administration is a polygon feature consisting of the smallest statistical areas bounded by visible features such as roads, streams, railroad tracks, and mountain ridges, as well as by nonvisible boundaries such as jurisdictional limits, school district, public safety boundaries, voting precincts, and census blocks. This methodology allows for single stream editing to move coincidental boundaries across many aggregate datasets simultaneously. Administration is maintained though an ArcGIS topology class in conjunction with County Parcels and Zoning. The topology prevents self-intersection and gaps, while ensuring complete coverage amongst the participating features.
Land records and property values as of December 01, 2020. This is historical data.
Voter Precincts
A map depicting the current state of street sweeping in the City of Roanoke.
Publication Year: 23 AUG 2011 (last updated)Associated Layers:Annotation:Shared boundaries: polling places, city boundaryAssociated Applications:GIS Website: Supermap, Community Portal, Real Estate GIS AGSMashup website:Pictometry:Original Source(optional): City Registrar or someone at State levelResponsible Dept: Registrars Office
Five-foot contour interval topographic coverage of almost half the County. Coverage is generally along the Roanoke County line, most of the Henry County line, and all of the Bedford County line. It also includes the SW corner of the County, plus the mid-section from Rocky Mount, east to Smith Mountain Lake, with much of the surrounding area in between. Zoom in on the data download page map to see if your area is covered. If you zoom in five times and wait a bit, a preview of the actual data will appear...but only at that tight zoom level.
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Areas included: Bedford County, Botetourt County, Craig County, Floyd County, Franklin County, Montgomery County, Roanoke City, Roanoke County, and Salem City