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We have found 163 datasets for the keyword "bâtiments municipaux". You can continue exploring the search results in the list below.
Datasets: 104,048
Contributors: 42
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163 Datasets, Page 1 of 17
Municipal buildings
Set of municipal buildings in the city of Saguenay.Building use:- Cultural, recreational and leisure- Transport, communication and public services**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Municipal buildings
Location of municipal buildings in the City of Repentigny.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Municipal District and County
The Municipal District dataset is comprised of all the polygons that represent Municipal Districts in Alberta. Municipal District is a municipality type defined under the authority of the Municipal Government Act. The formation of a Municipal District occur when a majority of the buildings used as dwellings are on parcels of land with an area of at least 1850 square meters and there is a population of 1000 or more. A municipal district is a government form in rural areas of the province.
Municipal buildings and services
Major buildings and municipal services.attributes:ID - unique identifierSubtype - Item subtypeName - Building or department name**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Greenbelt hamlets
Hamlets are smaller settlement areas identified in municipal official plans, generally without municipal water and sewer servicing. For precise boundaries and locations of hamlets, the appropriate municipality should be consulted.
Automatically Extracted Buildings
“Automatically Extracted Buildings” is a raw digital product in vector format created by NRCan. The feature classes of this product delineate polygonal building footprints automatically extracted from airborne Lidar data, high-resolution optical imagery or other sources.The first feature class, Automatically Extracted Buildings by acquisition source, contains building footprints delivered according to the spatial extent of each source dataset used for extraction. When the spatial extents of acquisition sources overlap, footprints for the same building may therefore be duplicated in this class.The second feature class, Optimized Buildings Layer, is an assembled and harmonized layer derived from the buildings by acquisition source. Its objective is to provide a unique representation of each building footprint by removing duplicates and resolving overlaps between sources.
Points of interest and place names - Saint-Hyacinthe
Point layer of points of interest and place names.Schools, pools, municipal buildings, etc.**Collection context** Manual collection and additions/withdrawals according to procedures between departments.**Collection method** Computer-aided mapping.**Attributes*** `ID_PDI` (`integer`): Identifier* `GROUPE_PDI` (`varchar`): Group* `NO_PDI` (`varchar`): Number* `PDI_NAME` (`varchar`): Name* `NO_CIVIC` (`varchar`): Civic number* `ODO_INDEX_LONG` (`varchar`): Long index odonym* `ODO_COURT_COMPLET` (`varchar`): Full short odonym* `ODO_LONG_COMPLETE` (`varchar`): Full long odonym* `ODO_INDEX_COURT` (`varchar`): Short index odonym* `URL` (`varchar`): URL* `CHARACTER` (`varchar`): Character* `POLICE` (`varchar`): Police* `scale` (`integer`): Scale* `USE` (`varchar`): Utility* `NOTES` (`varchar`): Notes* `SOURCE` (`varchar`): Source* `DATE_CREATION` (`smalldatetime`): Created on* `DATE_MODIFICATION` (`smalldatetime`): Modified on* `USER_MODIFICATION` (`varchar`): Modified by* `ICONE` (`varchar`): IconFor more information, consult the metadata on the Isogeo catalog (OpenCatalog link).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Building Footprints
To outline the locations of buildings on Parks Canada sites, buildings that Parks Canada manages, and other buildings of interest to Parks Canada. Polygon file to map building footprints of buildings on Parks Canada sites. Footprints may be derived by tracing the roof outline (for example from an airphoto) or using more detailed measurements of the ground floor.Data is not necessarily complete - updates will occur weekly.
Building footprints
Inventory of building footprints in the City of Rouyn-Noranda.**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
National Human Settlement - Physical Exposure
The Physical Exposure component of the National Human Settlement Layer (NHSL), defined here as the ‘Physical Exposure Model’, includes a delineation of settled areas and related land use across Canada, as well as information about buildings, persons, and building replacement values (structure and contents) within those areas.Buildings within the inventory are classified using a combination of occupancy types, engineering-based construction types adopted for Canada, and design levels representing the approximate building code requirements at the time of construction. The inventory is derived from detailed housing statistics provided at the dissemination area level as part of the 2016 national census and from georeferenced business listings. Building populations at different times of day are estimated for standard daytime hours (9am-5pm); for morning and evening commute hours (7am-9am; 5pm-7pm), and; for nighttime hours when the majority of people are home (7pm-7am). Replacement values are provided for structural, nonstructural, and contents components of buildings, based on industry replacement costs for representative regions across Canada.The physical exposure model is provided in two formats: (1) According to settled areas (i.e., polygons), which are areas that approximately delineate clusters of buildings across Canada. Summary statistics about buildings and populations within each settled area boundary are provided. (2) According to building archetypes (i.e., points) within settled areas. These are represented as point locations at the centroid of the corresponding settled area, and each settled area can have multiple point features corresponding to different building archetypes present within that area. In total, the model characterizes 35.2 million people in 9.7 million buildings across 390,000 locations with a total approximate replacement value of $8.2 trillion (2019 CAD) including contents.
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