Contains data from CARTO.CTYLIMIT.Updated as needed.
Geospatial data about Seattle Zoning Boundaries. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
This grouped layer of City of Seattle Parks contains Parks centroids, Parks Boundary outlines, Parks, and also Parks not owned by Seattle Parks and Recreation.
Layers also available separately as hosted views:
Refresh Cycle: Weekly on Mondays
Neighborhood Map Atlas neighborhoods are derived from the Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas. These are the smallest neighborhood areas and have been supplemented with alternate names from other sources in 2020. They roll up to the district areas. The sub-neighborhood field contains the most common name and the alternate name field is a comma delimited list of all the alternate names.
Disclaimer: The Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas is designed for subject indexing of legislation, photographs, and other records in the City Clerk's Office and Seattle Municipal Archives according to geographic area. Neighborhoods are named and delineated in this collection of maps in order to provide consistency in the way geographic names are used in describing records of the Archives and City Clerk, thus allowing precise retrieval of records. The neighborhood names and boundaries are not intended to represent any "official" City of Seattle neighborhood map.
The Office of the City Clerk makes no claims
as to the completeness, accuracy, or content of any data contained in the
Geographic Indexing Atlas; nor does it make any representation of any kind,
including, but not limited to, warranty of the accuracy or fitness for a
particular use; nor are any such warranties to be implied or inferred with
respect to the representations furnished herein. The maps are subject to change
for administrative purposes of the Office of the City Clerk. Information
contained in the site, if used for any purpose other than as an indexing and
search aid for the databases of the Office of the City Clerk, is being used at
one's own risk.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Public Artwork In Park dataset.
This feature class is the maintained or managed park boundaries of Seattle Parks & Recreation. This is a (weekly) generalized feature class based on DPR.Parks by Park Name.
Geospatial data about Seattle Park Boundaries. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
This geospatial dataset was created by uploading a shapefile through the new import experience (DSMUI). The original shapefile is attached and was downloaded from https://data-seattlecitygis.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/municipal-boundaries.
Table from the American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year series on education enrollment and attainment related topics for City of Seattle Council Districts, Comprehensive Plan Growth Areas and Community Reporting Areas. Table includes B14007/B14002 School Enrollment, B15003 Educational Attainment. Data is pulled from block group tables for the most recent ACS vintage and summarized to the neighborhoods based on block group assignment.
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Gardens dataset.
Locations of Seattle Parks and Recreation (SPR) responsibilities within the city limits. SPR location responsibilities may include: ownership, leases, maintenance, temporary transfer of jurisdiction, life estate, crew quarters, headquarters, storage facilities, tidelands, joint use agreements. This is the detailed transactions level park GIS layer. It is the most current Parks GIS layer. Park uses can be sorted using the "Park Use" field. If you just want the Park outlines (boundaries) then use DPR.ParksBND.
City of Seattle neighborhood boundaries with American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year series data of frequently requested topics. Data is pulled from block group tables for the most recent ACS vintage and summarized to the neighborhoods based on block group assignment. Seattle neighborhood geography of Council Districts, Comprehensive Plan Growth Areas are included.
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Park Bench dataset.
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Neighborhood map atlas district areas are derived from the Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas. These are the largest neighborhood areas and have been supplemented with alternate names from other sources in 2020. They are subdivided further into the neighborhood map atlas sub-areas called neighborhoods. The sub-neighborhoods field contains a comma delimited list of all the sub-areas and their alternate names.The original atlas is designed for subject indexing of legislation, photographs, and other documents and is an unofficial delineation of neighborhood boundaries used by the City Clerks Office. Sources for this atlas and the neighborhood names used in it include a 1980 neighborhood map produced by the Department of Community Development, Seattle Public Library indexes, a 1984-1986 Neighborhood Profiles feature series in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, numerous parks, land use and transportation planning studies, and records in the Seattle Municipal Archives. Many of the neighborhood names are traditional names whose meaning has changed over the years, and others derive from subdivision names or elementary school attendance areas.Disclaimer: The Seattle City Clerk's Office Geographic Indexing Atlas is designed for subject indexing of legislation, photographs, and other records in the City Clerk's Office and Seattle Municipal Archives according to geographic area. Neighborhoods are named and delineated in this collection of maps in order to provide consistency in the way geographic names are used in describing records of the Archives and City Clerk, thus allowing precise retrieval of records. The neighborhood names and boundaries are not intended to represent any "official" City of Seattle neighborhood map. The Office of the City Clerk makes no claims as to the completeness, accuracy, or content of any data contained in the Geographic Indexing Atlas; nor does it make any representation of any kind, including, but not limited to, warranty of the accuracy or fitness for a particular use; nor are any such warranties to be implied or inferred with respect to the representations furnished herein. The maps are subject to change for administrative purposes of the Office of the City Clerk. Information contained in the site, if used for any purpose other than as an indexing and search aid for the databases of the Office of the City Clerk, is being used at one's own risk.
Seattle Parks and Recreation ARCGIS park feature map layer web services are hosted on Seattle Public Utilities' ARCGIS server. This web services URL provides a live read only data connection to the Seattle Parks and Recreations Soccer Field Outline dataset.
For use in SPU CIP App, as well as DotMaps.
This map package references data from a high-resolution tree canopy change-detection layer for Seattle, Washington. Tree canopy change was mapped by using remotely sensed data from two time periods (2016 and 2021). Tree canopy was assigned to three classes: 1) no change, 2) gain, and 3) loss. No change represents tree canopy that remained the same from one time period to the next. Gain represents tree canopy that increased or was newly added, from one time period to the next. Loss represents the tree canopy that was removed from one time period to the next. Mapping was carried out using an approach that integrated automated feature extraction with manual edits. Care was taken to ensure that changes to the tree canopy were due to actual change in the land cover as opposed to differences in the remotely sensed data stemming from lighting conditions or image parallax. Direct comparison was possible because land-cover maps from both time periods were created using object-based image analysis (OBIA) and included similar source datasets (LiDAR-derived surface models, multispectral imagery, and thematic GIS inputs). OBIA systems work by grouping pixels into meaningful objects based on their spectral and spatial properties, while taking into account boundaries imposed by existing vector datasets. Within the OBIA environment a rule-based expert system was designed to effectively mimic the process of manual image analysis by incorporating the elements of image interpretation (color/tone, texture, pattern, _location, size, and shape) into the classification process. A series of morphological procedures were employed to ensure that the end product is both accurate and cartographically pleasing. No accuracy assessment was conducted, but the dataset was subjected to manual review and correction.University of Vermont Spatial Analysis LaboratoryThis map package consists of tree canopy data covering the following categories:50-acre HexagonsCouncil DistrictsSDOT Urban Forestry Management UnitsManagement Units - Dissolved with ROWParcels Right of WayBlock GroupsRSE Census TractsPublic SchoolsBasinsFor more information, please see the 2021 Tree Canopy Assessment.
The Community Assisted Response and Engagement (CARE) Reference Map consists of five separate map themes, which are selectable from the menu buttons in the map header. The map content will change after selecting a theme from the menu.Summary of the 5 reference map themes:SPD Boundaries: Police operational boundaries - precincts, sectors and beats.Neighborhoods: Informal neighborhood and district boundaries.Public Safety Answering Points (PSAP): County-wide boundary used for routing calls based on the caller's geographic location.Micro-Community Policing Plan (MCPP): Collection of neighborhoods defined for community engagement and public safety.Street Designation and Block Numbering: Streets and geographic boundaries that determine street directionality and block numbering.
City of Seattle municipal boundaries. Includes northerly and southerly boundaries for the city. The easterly and westerly boundaries of the city are defined by waterbodies.
Geospatial data about Seattle Neighborhoods. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
Contains data from CARTO.CTYLIMIT.Updated as needed.