Vector polygon map data of property parcels from Thurston County, Washington containing 121,778 features.
Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.
Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.
Parcels of Thurston County, Washington. Thurston County's data set for use in determining issues related to property based on tabular information stored in the ASCEND and SIGMA databases maintained by the Assessor's Department.Data set is used to provide a seamless map of property ownership in Thurston County.
Parcels of Thurston County, Washington. Thurston County's data set for use in determining issues related to property ownership based on tabular information stored in the ASCEND and SIGMA databases maintained by the Thurston County Assessor's Department.
The fields SEWER_TYPE and WATER_SRC come from a variety of different sources and jurisdictions which the Assessor’s Office has no control of or the ability to audit. The Assessor’s Office appraisers are not experts in determining the exact type of water/sewer system available to a site, and do not make any official determination. These legacy fields are not updated. Local utility providers should be contacted for better information for specific parcels.
The Urban Growth Area is used to manage future growth around densely populated areas. The urban growth area is the city/town and adjacent unincorporated growth area identified by the cities/towns/county to receive urban growth in the future. Outside of the boundary only rural growth is permissible.
Correction to this data can only be made through a Comprehensive Plan change or at the direction of Thurston County Long Range Planning due to a scrivener's error. The 1990 Washington State Growth Management Act requires the state's fastest growing cities and counties to designate UGAs around each city and town to accommodate the expected population growth over the next 20 years. In Thurston County, UGAs surround Bucoda, Lacey, Olympia, Rainier, Tumwater, Tenino, and Yelm. The current boundaries of the UGAs were established in 1990 and updated via the 2015 adoption of the Thurston County Comprehensive Plan: CHAPTER II - LAND USE II.URBAN GROWTH AREAS History and Purpose of Thurston County's Urban Growth Areas: In 1983, Thurston County, along with the cities of Olympia, Lacey and Tumwater, blazed the trail for growth management in Washington State by signing an interlocal government agreement called the "Urban Growth Management Agreement." That early agreement included an Urban Growth Management Boundary around the three cities to serve as a limit for the cities' expansion for 20 years. The purposes of the county's original growth areas remain relevant today: To provide for higher intensity development around the county's incorporated cities and towns and unincorporated community centers in order to concentrate development in areas where minimal impact to the environment, natural resources and rural atmosphere will occur. To minimize public costs and conserve energy by using services and facilities efficiently through concentration of development and integration of jobs, shopping, services and housing. To phase urban growth and infill with the provision of urban public services and facilities. One of the main effects of an urban growth area is to provide a limit for the extension of urban utilities, especially sewer service. To that end, overall residential density in urban growth areas should be high enough to support urban public services and to provide affordable housing choices. There should be a variety of housing types, with most densities ranging from 4 to 16 dwelling units per acre. Map M-14 identifies the urban growth areas for each city or town in Thurston County. The UGAs must accommodate the urban growth projected over the next 20 years including a reasonable market factor. Policies and actions emphasize the provision of urban land uses and services and include provisions specifically aimed at reducing low density residential sprawl. Joint plans established with each city and town include planning policies for each UGA. Joint plans are contained in separate documents, but are incorporated as part of the Thurston County Comprehensive Plan. Detailed land use designations for all UGAs around cities and towns are provided in the following joint plans (Map M-14 is keyed to the numbering below):Olympia/Thurston County Joint PlanLacey/Thurston County Joint Plan Tumwater/Thurston County Joint PlanYelm/Thurston County Joint PlanRainier/Thurston County Joint PlanTenino/Thurston County Joint PlanBucoda/Thurston County Joint PlanList of Map Correction's (Correction can only be made through a Comprehensive Plan change or at the direction of Thurston County Long Range Planning due to a scrivener's error.)Made on 5 AUG 2014 by KLW. Made on 15 July 2016 by KAH. - Correction of scrivener's error in Tenino UGA Boundary at the Teitge Annexations. This error was due to parcel and city mapping issues. The UGA has been fixed to be consistent with the parcel legal descriptions and the legal description included in the annexation ordinance approved by the City of Tenino, and the annexation approved by the Boundary Review Board.
This feature class is maintained in coordination with the addressing authorities of Thurston County Development Services and the Cities of Olympia, Lacey, Tumwater, Yelm, and Rainier. The intent of this data is to provide emergency services with the earliest address plan for new developments even while the development is under construction.Street centerlines are initially digitized from center of right-of-ways shown on survey plats and are then updated when a new orthophoto becomes available. Unnamed roads, driveways, planned roads, alleys are only intended for graphic display. These segments are generally not topologically connected to addressed streets. This feature class is used as the street centerline source for TCOMM911 Operations Center (CAPCOM) CAD/Ti Geo file load and Maverick Map data. As of 1/06, edits in this data regarding exact street name and begin/end address ranges are also entered in the County's Master Street Address Guide through Intrado's 911Net database maintenance request site.Layer/Field Explanation:Street centerlines are initially digitized from center of right-of-ways shown on preliminary plats and updated in final survey plats. If this source is delivered in hard copy, then the document will be scanned and the image georectified using common parcel corners found in the source and in the County parcel layer. Some centerlines are imported directly from digital survey drawings. When a new orthophoto becomes available, the centerlines are reviewed again and adjusted and/or vertex weeded as necessary.Theoretical address ranges are used to extend valid ranges beyond physical addresses. This will influence the positional quality of geocoded points if used as a reference source. It should be noted that the County Development Services Addressing Department does not assign house numbers where the right two digits exceed the number 49. For emergency services, address ranges need to be continuous where the physical street is continuous and maintain 100 block interval changes at intersections. As a result, geocoded points are likely to be skewed toward the lower end of each address range.Zero address ranges will not be used on any name/addressed street types. Any named and signed road without address ranges will default to a 100-199 address range Speed Limit- This attribute was created using the best available information at the time. Use with caution. Limited access segments (I5 and US 101) have been assigned address ranges based on mile post location. Decimal house numbers are not valid so mile post address ranges have been multiplied by 100.CITY_L and CITY_R are used to define msag community, not postal community. Unincorporated areas and those within the City of Olympia are given the community of 'OL'. A list is posted to the County GeoData Center showing unique street names selected by all jurisdictions within the county for addressing officers to consult in selecting street names, http://www.geodata.org/capcom.aspx. Capcom's policy requires that new street names are unique regardless of jurisdiction and street type. Unnamed roads, unofficially named roads, driveways and alleys are identified as TYPE=5.Special characters in street names are not valid. Hyphens are generally replaced with a space character.Forest roads within Capitol Forest are being captured with proper WA DNR road identification based on DNR map. The address range applied to forest roads is based on distance in miles x 100 from the trunk in which branching road extends.
This data is a subset of the NRCS soils data (March 2007), as requested by Thurston County Development Services Long Range Planning. This data identifies soil types that support pocket gopher habitat and is intended for planning and conservation efforts. Text disclaimer for Gopher Soils per Thurston County Planning Department: All soils shown on the Mazama pocket gopher soils map are to be used to determine areas that could potentially be suitable for Mazama pocket gophers and their habitat. The soils are derived from the final Federal Rule regarding the listing of the Mazama pocket gopher, which is on file with the Resource Stewardship Department. This map is a screening tool of where Mazama pocket gophers or their habitat may be present. The map should not be used as a final indicator that gophers are present, or that gopher habitat exists on a specific property. Mazama pocket gophers can be found in other locations outside of the mapped areas. More information on Mazama pocket gophers can be obtained from the Thurston County Resource Stewardship Department website by going to www.thurstonprairiehcp.org, or by going to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Mazama pocket gopher information page at https://www.fws.gov/wafwo/mpg.html.From the NRCS Soils Metadata: This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely sensed and other information. This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory of soils and non soil areas that normally occur in a repeatable pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the National Soil Information System relational database, which gives the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.
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Vector polygon map data of property parcels from Thurston County, Washington containing 121,778 features.
Property parcel GIS map data consists of detailed information about individual land parcels, including their boundaries, ownership details, and geographic coordinates.
Property parcel data can be used to analyze and visualize land-related information for purposes such as real estate assessment, urban planning, or environmental management.
Available for viewing and sharing as a map in a Koordinates map viewer. This data is also available for export to DWG for CAD, PDF, KML, CSV, and GIS data formats, including Shapefile, MapInfo, and Geodatabase.