Facebook
TwitterThis layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset.
If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:
Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links.
If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at 'mailto:gis@hcc.govt.nz' target='_blank'>gis@hcc.govt.nz.
This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers:
Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG)
Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links.
If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz.
This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers:
Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system)
Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download.
This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz
Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works.
Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data.
While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data:
‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Wastewater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG)
Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links.
If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz.
This Wastewater dataset contains the following layers:
Wastewater Abandoned Main (A wastewater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Wastewater Abandoned Manhole (A wastewater manhole that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Wastewater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic wastewater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Wastewater Main (A pipe that receives wastewater from domestic and industrial sources and directs it toward the wastewater treatment plant) Wastewater Manhole (An underground structure built over an opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Wastewater Node (A junction point in a pipe It can be a structure) Wastewater Pump Station (A facility that raises wastewater from areas too low to drain by gravity, into existing pipes) Wastewater Service Line (A gravity or pressure flow pipeline connecting a building’s wastewater system to a wastewater main) Wastewater Storage Unit (A device used to contain or store effluent) Wastewater Valve (A wastewater valve is used to shut off or regulate the flow of wastewater)
Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download.
This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz
Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works.
Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data.
While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data:
‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
TwitterLocation of sanitary, forcemains, stormwater and combined pipes that comprise the wastewater system in Hamilton.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditionshttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditions
The City of Hamilton has a large complex wastewater collection network consisting of both separated sewer and combined sewer systems:Modern areas of Hamilton have separated sewer systems. In older areas of Hamilton, a combined sewer system collects both storm water (rainwater or melt water), and wastewater in the same pipe. During periods of heavy rainfall or snowmelt, combined sewers are inundated with large volumes of storm water that can exceed the capacity of the pipes.
Facebook
TwitterA source water assessment identifies the vulnerability of the drinking water supply to contamination from typical human activities. The assessments are intended to facilitate and provide the basic information necessary for a local community to develop a program to protect the drinking water supply.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Stormwater Dataset.If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Stormwater dataset contains the following layers: Stormwater Abandoned Main (A stormwater main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Abandoned Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe that is still in the ground but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Stormwater Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic stormwater infrastructure as it was actually constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Stormwater Attenuation and Treatment Device (A device used to provide temporary storage and the controlled release of storm water volumes. Located upstream of the receiving environment, devices such as wetlands and ponds may also incorporate a storm water treatment function) Stormwater Catchpit (A device that collects stormwater run-off from the road and transports it along the network) Stormwater Catchpit Lead (A pipe that transports stormwater run-off from catchpits and connects into the stormwater network) Stormwater Channel (An open drain, natural watercourse (such as a stream) or lined channel that collects stormwater run-off from the environment or network) Stormwater Inlet (A structure where stormwater enters either a pipe, pond, culvert or channel) Stormwater Main (A pipe that transports stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water) Stormwater Manhole (An opening in a pipe for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the pipe) Stormwater Node (A junction point in a pipe. It can be a structure) Stormwater Outlet (A structure at the end of a pipe or channel that controls the flow of stormwater to a natural watercourse or body of water)Stormwater Service Line (A gravity flow pipeline connecting a building’s direct runoff collection system to a stormwater pipe or a kerb (in the case of kerb and channel connections)) Stormwater Soakage Trench (A subsurface structure into which runoff is conveyed for disposal by infiltration) Stormwater Subsoil Drain (A perforated drain used to collect ground water and transport it to a land drainage or stormwater drainage system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditionshttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditions
Emergency sewer repairs refer to sewer infrastructure in critical need located within the public right of way, including sewer mains, sewer manholes, etc. These emergencies could affect essential wastewater collection services. Solutions may include, but are not limited to, sewer main spot repairs, replacements, structural lining, flushing and manhole repairs.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditionshttps://www.hamilton.ca/city-initiatives/strategies-actions/open-data-licence-terms-and-conditions
Sewer laterals are privately-owned sewer service lines that connect a property to the City’s main sewer. Sewer laterals transport wastewater from sanitary fixtures and drains in your building to the public sewer system. Under the Sewer Lateral Management Program, property owners can have a complete sewer lateral investigation completed. If a qualifying defect, such as a structural deficiency within the public portion of the sewer or a defect caused by roots from a City-owned tree, causes or threatens loss of sanitary sewer service, the City of Hamilton will complete repairs within 4 days.
Facebook
TwitterA source water assessment identifies the vulnerability of the drinking water supply to contamination from typical human activities. The assessments are intended to facilitate and provide the basic information necessary for a local community to develop a program to protect the drinking water supply.
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset. If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing: CAD (DWG) Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links. If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at gis@hcc.govt.nz. This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers: Water Valve (A tap on a main that controls the flow of water along that main) Water Service Valve (A tap on a service line that controls the flow of water along that line) Water Service Line/Connection (A pipe that delivers water from the main to a building for consumption) Water Meter (A device that measures and displays the amount of water passing through the associated main or service line) Water Main Offset (A point along a main indicating the distance of the main from another known point such as the property boundary or kerb) Water Main Crossover Junction (The junction of one or more pipes where the pipes do not intersect - aka crossover junction) Water Main Abandoned (A water main that is still in the ground, but is now disused and no longer forms part of the active network) Water Hydrant (A tap supplying access to high-pressure water to fight fires, flush pipes and fill water trucks) Water Chamber MH (An opening/structure in a water chamber for the purpose of allowing operators or equipment access to the inside of the chamber) Water Chamber (A chamber on a water main (except bulk mains) containing operational or monitoring devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing operational devices such as valves or flow meters) Water BM AV Chamber (A chamber on a water bulk main containing an air valve) Water Backflow Device (A device which prevents the accidental backflow of contaminated water into the water system) Water Asbuilts (Plans showing the location and alignment of basic water infrastructure as it was constructed on site, as provided by the contractor or their representatives. Data has not yet been fully incorporated into the Council GIS or asset management system) Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the Council’s GIS (ArcGIS) dataset. The GIS dataset is synchronised with asset data contained in the Council’s Asset Management (IPS) database. A subset of the GIS dataset has been made available for download. This GIS dataset is currently updated weekly which in turn dynamically updates to the WLASS open data site. Any questions pertaining to this data should be directed to the City Waters Asset Information Team at CityWatersAssetInfo@hcc.govt.nz Hamilton City Council does not make any representation or give any warranty as to the accuracy or exhaustiveness of the data released for public download. Levels, locations and dimensions of works depicted in the data may not be accurate due to circumstances not notified to Council. A physical check should be made on all levels, locations and dimensions before starting design or works. Hamilton City Council shall not be liable for any loss, damage, cost or expense (whether direct or indirect) arising from reliance upon or use of any data provided, or Council's failure to provide this data. While you are free to crop, export and re-purpose the data, we ask that you attribute the Hamilton City Council and clearly state that your work is a derivative and not the authoritative data source. Please include the following statement when distributing any work derived from this data: ‘This work is derived entirely or in part from Hamilton City Council data; the provided information may be updated at any time, and may at times be out of date, inaccurate, and/or incomplete.'
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.ibisworld.com/about/termsofuse/https://www.ibisworld.com/about/termsofuse/
The Water Supply industry in New Zealand has shown strong revenue growth over the past five years, predominantly due to supportive government policies and consistent population growth. Performance has also been influenced by rainfall, affecting the agricultural sector, which constitutes almost two-thirds of the country’s water consumption. High export market prices have led to increased production by farmers, increasing demand for water supply. This trend was exacerbated in 2023-24, when rainfall reached historically low levels, forcing farmers to rely on irrigation from water mains. Overarching all these trends has been consistently strong growth in variable volumetric water charges, charged to end users based on metered water usage. Annual expansions have consistently outpaced inflation, driving up real revenue. In total, revenue is expected to expand at an annualised 7.4% over the five years through 2025-26 to $1.6 billion, including an anticipated jump of 6.8% in 2025-26. Despite revenue growth, surpluses remain tight as most water suppliers are government or government-owned entities that reinvest profit back into capital expenditure. An exception is the Auckland region, where Watercare split from its affiliation with the Auckland Council in July 2025. In recent years, the industry has seen significant political involvement, stemming from New Zealand's water infrastructure challenges. The previous Labour Government’s proposed Three Waters Reform Programme faced political opposition and was replaced by the newly elected National Government's Local Water Done Well plan in February 2025, aimed at sustainable water services delivery. This movement is expected to drive a more stable future for the industry for future industry expansions. This framework will be reinforced by detailed Long Term Plans presented by each water supplier, projecting revenue and expenditure through to 2034. Environmental concerns are driving future trends around declining per capita water consumption. Trends in annual rainfall are also crucial, particularly to water-intensive industries like agriculture and could necessitate the implementation of water security strategies. Overall, revenue is forecast to rise at an annualised 3.7% over the five years through 2030-31, to total $1.8 billion.
Facebook
TwitterThis data, indicating the supply class for Mohawk River Watershed tax parcels, was collected by Stone Environmental, Inc. for the New York State Department of State with funds provided under Title 11 of the Environmental Protection Fund.These data represent tax parcel boundaries. Data are meant for watershed planning purposes only. Mohawk River Watershed Coalition of Conservation Districts does not take responsibility for the overall content and/or spatial accuracy of the tax parcel data available for download on this page.You should always verify actual map data and information. The limitations and accuracy level of the data should be accounted for before using them in any analyses and their validity cannot be guaranteed.Parcel boundary data was acquired by county offices. Individual County and Town files were compiled to create a seamless coverage of Tax Parcels. Areas of overlap were eliminated by clipping to adjacent county boundaries. Attribute information of interest, property class code, residential development from 1945 to present (year built), sewer service code, and water service codes were obtained from the New York Office of Real Property Services (ORPS, accessed in November 2011). Parcel boundaries and attribute information from ORPS were joined based on the municipality code and print key.Source Information:Albany: Albany County Real Property Tax Services. 2010 Albany County, NY parcel boundaries derived from AutoCAD MAP 3D tax maps; Delaware: Delaware County Planning Department. The license agreement between Delaware County and the Mohawk River Watershed prohibit the viewing of this data through a web mapping application; Fulton: Fulton County. The license agreement between Fulton County and the Mohawk River Watershed prohibit the viewing of this data through a web mapping application;Greene: Greene County; Hamilton: Hamilton County Real Property Tax Services; Herkimer: Herkimer Oneida Counties Comprehensive Planning Program, 2011; Public water and sewer were manually assigned to all City of Utica parcels. Public water and sewer were assigned to parcels within 500 feet of water and sewer lines for the City of Rome parcels.Lewis: Lewis County; The license agreement between Lewis County and the Mohawk River Watershed prohibit the viewing of this data through a web mapping application;Madison: Madison County;Montgomery: Montgomery County;Oneida: Herkimer Oneida Counties Comprehensive Planning Program, 2011;Otsego: Otsego County;Saratoga: Saratoga County, 2011;Schenectady: Schenectady County; Schoharie: Schoharie CountyView Dataset on the Gateway
Facebook
Twitterhttps://gis.conservationhalton.net/doc/opendatahub/Conservation_Halton_Open_Government_Licence.pdfhttps://gis.conservationhalton.net/doc/opendatahub/Conservation_Halton_Open_Government_Licence.pdf
Click Here for Metadata. Under the Clean Water Act, 2006, areas where drinking water sources are vulnerable to human activities occurring on the land surface have been mapped. Planning policy protects the water resources in these areas from degradation. Lake Ontario is the source of drinking water for about 92 percent of those who live in the Halton-Hamilton Source Protection Region. Six intake pipes deliver water to four treatment plants located along the shoreline from Oakville to Hamilton. Each pipe is surrounded by a protection zone that identifies where it takes surface water two hours or less to flow to the intake or where significant drinking water threats exist. The protection zones include areas of land adjacent to streams and storm sewers where runoff water can quickly reach the intake. These zones are vulnerable to contamination and management measures are in place to reduce the riskThe area considered to be most vulnerable to contamination is the area closest to the intake. The reason for this vulnerability is due to an assumed lack of time for dilution to reduce the concentration of any contaminant released within the zone. Also, there is an assumed lack of time for the operator of the water system to react to the release. To protect this vulnerable area, a circle with one kilometre radius is drawn, centred on the intake and projected to the lake bottom. This zone is called “intake protection zone one” or IPZ-1. Where these circles intersect land the onshore extent is 120 metres.The intake protection zone two, or IPZ-2, is delineated using a combination of hydrodynamic modelling within the lake and the calculation of time-of-travel within in-land pathways such as creeks and storm sewers that discharge near the lake intakes. Two hours has been set as the minimum amount of time needed for operators of the water treatment plant to react to a contamination concern.Intake protection zone three, IPZ-3, is an area where modelling has demonstrated that contaminants released during an event may be transported to the intake and cause an adverse effect. The IPZ-3 lies outside of an IPZ-1 and IPZ-2.
Facebook
TwitterThis layer is part of Hamilton City Council's Freshwater Dataset.
If you wish to download and consume this entire dataset - click on the link for the file format(s) of your choosing:
Please note that the links above may change at any time. For best practice, please refer to this page for the correct links.
If any of the links are above are not functioning, please let us know at 'mailto:gis@hcc.govt.nz' target='_blank'>gis@hcc.govt.nz.
This Water (Freshwater) dataset contains the following layers:
Hamilton City Council 3 Waters data is derived from the