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Planning, Engineering & Permitting - Birmingham City Limits Maps and Data
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Planning, Engineering & Permitting - Birmingham Zoning Boundaries Maps and Data
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TwitterBirmingham, Alabama Mayor William A. Bell signed an executive order to improve the way citizens interact with their government. The new law allowed the creation of this online open data portal to increase transparency and accountability in Birmingham by making key information easily accessible and usable to both city officials and citizens. Click here to view the Birmingham Open Data Policy. You may use the search bar at the top of the page to find data. Once you find a dataset you would like to download, select the data and view the available download options. Datasets can also be filtered to display only the features of the dataset that you are interested in for download. Data is offered for download in several formats. Spatial and tabular data formats (CSV, KML, shapefile, and JSON) are available for use in GIS and other applications. Mobile users may require additional software to view downloaded data. To edit a shapefile on an iOS device, users will need to unzip the file with an app such as iZip and then open the file in a viewer/editor such as iGIS. By using data made available through this site, the user agrees to all the conditions stated in the following paragraphs as well as the terms and conditions described under the City of Birmingham homepage. The data made available has been modified for use from its original source, which is the City of Birmingham. The City of Birmingham makes no claims as to the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or content of any data contained in this application; makes no 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 information or data furnished herein. The data is subject to change as modifications and updates are complete. It is understood that the information contained in the site is being used at one's own risk. The City of Birmingham reserves the right to discontinue providing any or all of the data feeds at any time and to require the termination of any and all displaying, distributing or otherwise using any or all of the data for any reason including, without limitation, your violation of any provision of these Terms of Use. If you have questions, suggestions, requests or any other feedback, please contact or email at [email protected]
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Planning, Engineering & Permitting - Birmingham Area Zipcode Boundaries
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TwitterNational Register of Historic Places: Foley, AlabamaThe Foley Downtown Historic District consists of an irregularly shaped area within the core of the community’s central business district that contains approximately 19 acres of land. The topography of the district is flat. The district extends along two principal north-south streets: McKenzie (Alabama Highway 59) and Alston Streets. Both of these streets are designated North to the north of Laurel Street (the principal east to west street in the district, also known as U.S. Highway 98) and South to its south. Other east to west streets include (from north to south) Violet, Jessamine, and Orange Avenues, each of which is designated East to the east of McKenzie Street and West to its west. The district is urban and commercial in character with closely spaces of adjoining buildings being typical. Other than Heritage Park, a large open space to the east of McKenzie Street between Violet and Laurel Avenues, landscaping is minimal. Streets are typically lined with sidewalks and diagonal street parking. _Narrative Description Contributing resources date from the following periods: 1900-1910, 2; 1911-1920, 1; 1921-1930, 9; 1931-1945, 7; and 1946-circa 1960, 10. The majority of the contributing resources (23, 79%) are commercial. Other contributing resources include a former post office, a hospital, a park, a dwelling, a Masonic Temple, and a railroad depot. Architecturally, most of the contributing resources are simple in character and reflect 20th century commercial architectural trends. Notable exceptions include: the Hope Building/Old U.S. Post Office (1921, Inv. #25, Photos #9 and 10) designed by James A. Wetmore, Acting Supervising Architect, in association with Frank Lockwood of Montgomery, Alabama; the Masonic Temple (circa 1925, Inv. #13), designed by George B. Rogers of Mobile; the L & N Railroad Depot (1909, Inv. #9, Photos #12 and 13), the Renaissance Revival style Foley Hotel (1928, Inv. 13, Photos #3, 4, 5, and 21), designed by Birmingham architects Warren, Knight and Davis. The district includes 29 contributing resources, if which 27 are buildings, one is a site, and one is a structure. The majority of the contributing buildings are one story in height (18, 67%), with the remainder being two stories. Only three of the contributing buildings are frame, with the remainder being either brick or concrete block. Noncontributing resources include six (55%) that were constructed after the district’s period of significance and five that were substantially altered after the district’s period of significance. The District includes 40 resources of which 29 are contributing and 11 are noncontributing.
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Planning, Engineering & Permitting - GIS Mapping files
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TwitterGeoJSON files of the Birmingham ward boundaries combined from the 40 existing published open geojson files Licence: None
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TwitterPoint locations of Traffic Regulation Order loading bays in Birmingham City Centre The locations are provided by the Birmingham City Council traffic management and highways team with easting and northing coordinates The table includes the designated street name of the bay location, maximum stay duration (if applicable) and the minimum return duration (if applicable). To request access contact the Data Insight Team.
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TwitterPoint locations of registered taxi bays in Birmingham City Centre The locations are provided by the Birmingham City Council traffic management and highways team with easting and northing coordinates The table includes the name of the bay location, maximum taxis allowed (if applicable) and the operating times of the bay (if applicable). To request access contact the Data Insight Team.
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Twitterhttps://www.alabama-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.alabama-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions
A dataset listing Alabama cities by population for 2024.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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This dataset provides information on the percentage of people aged 65 and over who received a seasonal flu vaccination. It covers vaccinations administered during the influenza season, which runs from 1st September to the end of February. The data supports public health efforts to monitor and improve flu vaccine uptake among older adults, a group particularly vulnerable to complications from influenza. The dataset is sourced from official government vaccine uptake records.
Rationale
The indicator aims to increase the uptake of seasonal flu immunisations among individuals aged 65 and over. This supports broader public health goals to reduce the burden of influenza-related illness and hospitalisation in older populations.
Numerator
The numerator is the number of flu vaccinations administered to individuals aged 65 and over during the influenza season, from 1st September to the end of February. This data is collected through the GOV Seasonal Flu Vaccine Uptake programme.
Denominator
The denominator is the GP-registered population aged 65 and over on the date of data extraction. It includes all eligible individuals, including those who were offered the vaccine but declined it, ensuring the uptake rate reflects the entire target population.
Caveats
Data collection relies on Read codes used in GP systems to identify patients in clinical risk groups eligible for vaccination. Limitations may arise from incomplete coding or delays in data entry. Additionally, the dataset may not capture all eligible individuals if their records are not updated in time.
External references
OHID Fingertips: Seasonal Flu Vaccinations in Over 65s
Localities ExplainedThis dataset contains data based on either the resident locality or registered locality of the patient, a distinction is made between resident locality and registered locality populations:Resident Locality refers to individuals who live within the defined geographic boundaries of the locality. These boundaries are aligned with official administrative areas such as wards and Lower Layer Super Output Areas (LSOAs).Registered Locality refers to individuals who are registered with GP practices that are assigned to a locality based on the Primary Care Network (PCN) they belong to. These assignments are approximate—PCNs are mapped to a locality based on the location of most of their GP surgeries. As a result, locality-registered patients may live outside the locality, sometimes even in different towns or cities.This distinction is important because some health indicators are only available at GP practice level, without information on where patients actually reside. In such cases, data is attributed to the locality based on GP registration, not residential address.
Click here to explore more from the Birmingham and Solihull Integrated Care Partnerships Outcome Framework.
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This spatial dataset is an output of the Natural England County & City Natural Capital Atlas project (July 2020). It shows variation in ecosystem service flow for habitats across England, based on indicators identified by NE in the 2018 Natural Capital Indicators project. The dataset comprises a hexagonal grid which summarises indicator values across the country (each unit = 5km²).
Natural Capital is an important aspect of current environmental policy and management. This dataset, in combination with the other project outputs, will support understanding of Natural Capital in England and serve as a valuable engagement tool to communicate concepts of the Natural Capital approach to a wide variety of stakeholders.
For full methodology and user guide see documents ‘NCAtlas_Devon’ and ‘NC-Mapping-User-Guidance’ at http://publications.naturalengland.org.uk/publication/6672365834731520.
For full metadata documentation see the data package download below.
Copyright statement: LCM2015 © NERC (CEH) 2011. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown Copyright 2007. © Defra. Contains Defra information © Defra - Project MB0102. © Environment Agency. © Forestry Commission. © Historic England [year]. © Joint Nature Conservation Committee. © Natural England copyright. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains data supplied by © NERC - Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. © Natural England copyright. Natural England Licence No. 2011/052 British Geological Survey © NERC, all rights reserved, © NSRI Cranfield University. Contains National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [year]. Contains Rural Payments Agency. © Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Bath & North East Somerset Council. © Bedford Borough Council. © London Borough of Bexley. © Birmingham City Council. © Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council. © Blackpool Council. © Bolton Council. © BCP Council. © Bracknell Forest Council. © City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council. © Brighton & Hove City Council. © Bristol City Council. © London Borough of Bromley. © Buckinghamshire County Council. © Bury Council. © Calderdale Council. © Cambridgeshire County Council. © Central Bedfordshire Council. © Cheshire East Council. © Cheshire West and Chester Council. © Cornwall Council. © Cumbria County Council. © Derbyshire County Council. © Devon County Council. © Doncaster Council. © Dorset Council. © Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Durham County Council. © East Riding of Yorkshire Council. © East Sussex County Council. © Essex County Council. © Gateshead Council. © Gloucestershire County Council. © Hampshire County Council. © Herefordshire Council. © Hertfordshire County Council. © Hull City Council. © Isle of Anglesey County Council. © Isle of Wight Council. © Kent County Council. © Kirklees Council. © Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council. © Lake District National Park. © Lancashire County Council. © Leicester City Council. © Leicestershire County Council. © Lincolnshire County Council. © Manchester City Council. © Medway Council. © Norfolk County Council. © North Lincolnshire Council. © North Somerset Council. © North Yorkshire County Council. © Northamptonshire County Council. © Northumberland County Council. © Nottingham City Council. © Nottinghamshire County Council. © Oldham Council. © Oxfordshire County Council. © Peterborough City Council. © Plymouth City Council. © Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council. © Portsmouth City Council. © Reading Borough Council. © Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council. © Rochdale Borough Council. © Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council. © Rutland County Council. © Salford City Council. © Sefton Council. © Sheffield City Council. © Shropshire Council. © Slough Borough Council. © Somerset County Council. © South Gloucestershire Council. © Southampton City Council. © St Helens Council. © Staffordshire County Council. © Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council. © Stockton Council. © Suffolk County Council. © Surrey County Council. © Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council. © Thurrock Council. © Torbay Council. © Trafford Council. © Wakefield Council. © Walsall Council. © Warrington Borough Council. © Warwickshire County Council. © West Berkshire Council. © West Sussex County Council. © Wigan Council. © Wiltshire Council. © Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead Council. © Wirral Council. © Wokingham Borough Council. © Worcestershire County Council. © City of York Council.
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This is the ONS Postcode Directory (ONSPD) for the West Midlands Combined Authorities, containing comprehensive postcode data for the region.
The ONS Postcode Directory relates both current and terminated postcodes in the United Kingdom to a wide range of current statutory administrative, electoral, health and other area geographies. It also links postcodes to pre-2002 health areas, 1991 Census enumeration districts for England and Wales, 2001 Census Output Areas (OA) and Super Output Areas (SOA) for England and Wales, as well as Wards and Constituencies.
Every postcode record in the ONSPD is produced by ONS Geography, who provide geographic support to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and geographic services used by other organisations. The postcode data is issued quarterly. Please note that this product contains Royal Mail, Gridlink, LPS (Northern Ireland), Ordnance Survey and ONS Intellectual Property Rights.
Data is updated quarterly. See https://geoportal.statistics.gov.uk/ for the full release schedule.To view previous versions see the Snapshots section on the Export tab.
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Release
August 2025
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Important Note
Since the August 2024 release, the dataset now includes the new 2024 constituencies. You can use our Boundaries - Constituencies (2024) dataset to work with this new geography.
This dataset will always contain the latest iteration of the postcodes file, ensuring you have access to the most up-to-date postcode mapping for analysis.
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Planning, Engineering & Permitting - Birmingham City Limits Maps and Data