Contains data from CARTO.CTYLIMIT.Updated as needed.
Tabular data that powers basic monitoring dashboards for the total population, housing and jobs for the City of Seattle. Each record represents the totals for each year since 2000 (and 1995) through the most recently available data. Includes the change from the previous year.
Seattle Parks and Recreation owned and managed properties within the city limits or at the borders of the city limits. SPR properties that are well outside of the city limits are not shown. For most use cases, this using this Park boundary is fine.BEWARE: Properties includes Parks Maintenance and Shop Locations, Life Estates (properties that are owned by private citizens until their passing), Properties are own by other City departments or agencies and managed by SPR, SPR owned properties that are managed by other city departments or agencies, Park leased properties, and submerged SPR properties.If a more detailed park delineation is required then use Parks Boundary Details.This is a (weekly) generalized feature class based on DPR.Parks by Park Name.
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
2020 census geography including tracts for the city of Seattle, King County, Washington. Excludes partial tracts with very small populations within the city limits along the southern border of the city.Includes assignment of Seattle Community Reporting Areas (CRA-53), Community Reporting Area Groups (neighborhood roll up-13), Council Districts (7-assigned to the tract with the majority of the population based on the distribution of the component census blocks), and Urban Village Demographic Areas (UVDA). UVDA assignments subject to change based on future planning areas.
This layer shows total trips by mode and their corresponding emissions across different neighborhoods in Seattle. The data is mapped to census tracts.
This layer shows total trips by mode and their corresponding emissions across different neighborhoods in Seattle. The data is mapped to census tracts.
This layer shows total trips by mode and their corresponding emissions across different neighborhoods in Seattle. The data is mapped to census tracts.
Annual April, 1 Small Area Estimates Program (SAEP) estimates provide a consistent set of small area population and housing data at the census block (vintage 2020). This table summarized to the City of Seattle growth management areas.
Estimates are annual April, 1 for the 2010-202X with the most current year added Q4 of that year.
(SAEP) estimates are meant to provide a consistent set of small area population and housing data for statewide applications. SAEP estimates are generated by the Washington State Office of Financial Management for census areas and other areas of statewide significance.
Before using the SAEP estimates, please see the SAEP User Guide to gain a better understanding of the data and methods behind the estimates as well as limitations in their use. For more specific information about the 2020 data release, please see the User Notes and Errata document.
Please note that SAEP estimates are NOT the official state population estimates used for revenue distribution and program administration related to cities and counties. Users interested in city and county estimates should see the state's official April 1 population estimates program.
This layer shows the aggregated emissions resulting from energy consumption in buildings across different neighborhoods and sectors (i.e., residential, commercial and industrial). The data is mapped to census tracts.
This
layer has been populated with utility energy consumption data
procured directly from Seattle City Light (electricity), aggregated and anonymized by sector, quarter, and census
tract. Some tracts have their data combined and averaged with
neighboring tracts for privacy purposes. If data is aggregated in a
tract, the "grouped flag" field will read
"true".
Census 2020 blocks in King County with selected P.L. 94-171 redistricting data.
Important note: The Census Bureau advises analysts to aggregate blocks together to form larger geographic units before using the 2020 Census data.
Background: The Bureau used a new tool, called Differential Privacy, to inject statistical noise into the 2020 Census data in order to protect privacy. The resulting noise can cause substantial inaccuracy at the block level; combining data for blocks and other small geographies reduces the inaccuracy. For more information see Redistricting Data: What to Expect and When (census.gov), 2020 Census Data Products: Disclosure Avoidance Modernization.
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Contains data from CARTO.CTYLIMIT.Updated as needed.