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We have found 89 datasets for the keyword "housing". You can continue exploring the search results in the list below.
Datasets: 104,046
Contributors: 42
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89 Datasets, Page 1 of 9
Residential projects
Residential projects approved by the municipal council and planned on the territory of the City of Sherbrooke.attributes:Name - Project nameHyperlink - Hyperlink to the project planNumberUnit - Number of housing units planned in the project**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Off-market housing in the agglomeration of Montreal
List of projects and/or buildings associated with off-market housing. Inventory built from various data sources of varying quality in the early 2000s and maintained since then on an annual basis. Data used to better understand the supply of non-market housing in the territory. Off-market housing corresponds to all housing owned by an entity that does not aim to make a profit: NPO, cooperative, government, paramunicipal company. The data is categorized by type of project, namely: HLM: Public housing managed by the Office municipal d'habitation de Montréal, whose rent is fixed at 25% of household income. This category includes the Corporation des Habitations Jeanne-Mance. OMHM: Affordable public housing resulting from projects by the Office municipal d'habitation de Montréal outside the HLM program and managed in a form similar to NPOs with the participation of residents. SHDM: Public and affordable rental housing belonging to the Société d'habitation et de développement de Montréal and whose projects may be managed by an NPO. NPO: Rental housing owned and managed by a non-profit organization and aimed at customers who have difficulty finding adequate housing. NPOs sometimes offer community support to their tenants. Coop: Housing owned by a cooperative that leases them to its members. Cooperatives aim to offer quality housing at affordable prices while promoting socio-economic diversity in projects. Anjou80: Affordable rental housing owned by the Anjou 80 organization.More information on the subject is available on [the City of Montreal's website] (https://montreal.ca/articles/repartition-des-logements-sociaux-et-communautaires-17858).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
Public Housing Units - Nova Scotia Families
This program provides affordable rental housing to families in need and offers rental rates based on income.
National Human Settlement - Social Fabric and Capacity Thresholds
The Social Vulnerability component of the National Human Settlement Layer (NHSL) includes information about broad spatial patterns of social vulnerability at the neighbourhood scale, and indicators about the capacities for a community to withstand and recover from disaster events based on intrinsic characteristics of housing, family structure, individual autonomy and financial agency.Information in the model provides a means of comparing relative levels of social vulnerability from one region to another across Canada and helps to identify specific dimensions within a community that contributes to their relative levels of social vulnerability. This information is not intended for site-specific study, but instead to understand broad patterns of social characteristics and vulnerability across multiple census dissemination areas.
Public Housing Units - Nova Scotia Seniors
This program provides affordable rental housing to seniors (age 58 and older) with low incomes. Rent is determined by your annual income.
Structure
STR - Facilities and structures (structure)Man-made construction. For example, resources describing buildings, museums, churches, schools, hospitals, factories, housing, monuments, and towers.
Alberta Census Profiles by CSD – Current
This dataset includes commonly used socio-economic indicators by CSD (census subdivision). The feature classes were created from geosptial boundary files and tabular data related to the 2016 Census of Canada, Statistics Canada. The topics included are: Age groups and sex, core housing needs, dwelling types, Education, labour force, immigration, Income, knowledge of languages, lone parent family, mobility, housing tenure and visible minorities. This does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada of this product.
Percentage of owner households spending 30% or more income on shelter costs by census division, 2016
This service shows the proportion of average total income of households which is spent on shelter costs by census division. The data is from the Census Profile, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-316-X2016001.Shelter-cost-to-income ratio is calculated for private households living in owned or rented dwellings who reported a total household income greater than zero.Private households living in band housing, located on an agricultural operation that is operated by a member of the household, and households who reported a zero or negative total household income are excluded.The relatively high shelter-costs-to-household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2016, while household total income is reported for the year 2015. As well, for some households, the 2015 household total income may represent income for only part of a year.For additional information refer to the 2016 Census Dictionary for 'Total income' and 'Shelter cost'.To have a cartographic representation of the ecumene with this socio-economic indicator, it is recommended to add as the first layer, the “NRCan - 2016 population ecumene by census division” web service, accessible in the data resources section below.
Percentage of owner households spending 30% or more income on shelter costs by census subdivision, 2016
This service shows the proportion of average total income of households which is spent on shelter costs by census subdivision. The data is from the Census Profile, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 98-316-X2016001.Shelter-cost-to-income ratio is calculated for private households living in owned or rented dwellings who reported a total household income greater than zero.Private households living in band housing, located on an agricultural operation that is operated by a member of the household, and households who reported a zero or negative total household income are excluded.The relatively high shelter-costs-to-household income ratios for some households may have resulted from the difference in the reference period for shelter costs and household total income data. The reference period for shelter cost data is 2016, while household total income is reported for the year 2015. As well, for some households, the 2015 household total income may represent income for only part of a year.For additional information refer to the 2016 Census Dictionary for 'Total income' and 'Shelter cost'.To have a cartographic representation of the ecumene with this socio-economic indicator, it is recommended to add as the first layer, the “NRCan - 2016 population ecumene by census subdivision” web service, accessible in the data resources section below.
Reference residential neighborhoods
A geographic layer dividing Montreal into historical and analytical entities, meeting housing analysis needs. In addition, these neighborhoods are relatively homogeneous socio-economically living environments. **This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
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