Description: The site address point collection or Civic Address Points are a colelction of points located within the related Parcel property. These popints indicate the given the Civic Address issued to the property by the City of Prince George. These points should be used for the puropise of identifiying the Civic Address issued to proeprties along Road segments. This datasets is also used by the Regional 911 Service.
Description: This is a type of primary land division or description, which defines a parcel of land that has been surveyed. Normally the District Lot Number is a unique numerical listing within a specific Land District, such as D.L. 1234 Cariboo District. However, there may also be a D.L. 1234 in each of the 80 Land Districts. District Lots Numbers also exist with both alphabetic and numeric characters, e.g. DL1234s SDYD.
Description: A graphical representation of a survey conducted by a BC land surveyor which shows the spatial extent, area, corner monuments and generally the geographic location of a specific area of land for the purpose of:Establishing the boundaries of a new parcel of titled land; e.g. Subdivision Plan, Strata Plan, Reference plan pursuant to Section 99(1)(c), (f), (g) and (h).Defining an area of land that is being dedicated to the public or to close an area that has been so dedicated, e.g. road, park or land returned to CrownRe-establishing a corner or angle of an existing parcel of titled land, e.g. posting plan.Registering a charge against title to land affecting a portion of land within a title, e.g. Easement, Covenant, Lease, and Statutory Right of Way.Land title examiners examine survey plans affecting all privately-held land under the Land Title Act.
Description: An interest in land (less than the fee simple estate) or encumbrance that is registered on the title by the LTSA’s land title office. Charges typically fall into these categories:MortgagesStatutory rights of wayA right to have access to land for a specific use, often granted to a municipality or utility company in order to provide and maintain services to parcels of land (such as underground cables or pipelines).EasementsA limited right attached to land (the dominant tenement) for the benefit of the owner of dominant tenement to use land of the owner of servient tenement. An example of an easement would be a driveway crossing one owner’s land (the servient tenement) to provide access to another owner’s land (the dominant tenement).CovenantsJudgments filed in support of debt/tax collectionCertificates of pending litigation affecting the titleClaims of Builders Lien
Description: An owner of land not only owns the surface but also the space above and below. Although upper and lower limits for a standard parcel of land are not clearly defined or delineated on a plan, the courts have generally accepted that these ownership rights extend above and below the surface as necessary for the ordinary use and enjoyment of the land.The definition of an air space parcel in Section 138 of the Land Title Act is “ a volumetric parcel, whether or not occupied in whole or in part by a building or other structure, shown as such in an air space plan”. This would include clearly defined upper and lower limits and side boundaries that are marked on the air space plan as shown in Figure 1. The purpose of creating air space parcels is for the occupation of the volumetric space by a permanent structure, such as a building or overpass, or to preclude anyone else from using the volume of space, such as a flight path for an airport runway. The aerial walkways linking department stores to their parking lots across the street in downtown Vancouver are examples of very simple air space parcels. An air space parcel may consist wholly of air space, or air space and land, or possibly air space, land and water. Subject to practical constraints and certain rules and regulations, an air space parcel may take any shape and become very complex. If an air space parcel were used to legally separate two or more components of a multi-use development, the boundaries would follow the configuration of that component of the development.
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Min. Scale: 5000.0 Max. Scale: 0.0 Label Placement: esriServerLinePlacementCenterStart Label Expression: N/A Use Coded Values: true Symbol:
Color: [0, 0, 0, 255] Background Color: N/A Outline Color: N/A Vertical Alignment: baseline Horizontal Alignment: left Right to Left: false Angle: 0 XOffset: 0 YOffset: 0 Size: 9 Font Family: Tahoma Font Style: normal Font Weight: normal Font Decoration: none
TrafficFlow
(
type: esriFieldTypeSmallInteger, alias: Traffic Flow
, Coded Values:
[1: Same direction - Address Range vs Traffic Flow]
, [0: Both directions - Address Range vs Traffic Flow]
, [-1: Opposite directions - Address Range vs Traffic Flow]
)
RemovalPriority
(
type: esriFieldTypeSmallInteger, alias: Snow Removal Priority
, Coded Values:
[1: Priority 1 to be completed within 48 hours of the end of snow event]
, [2: Priority 2 to be completed within 48 hours of the end of snow event]
, [3: Priority 3 to be completed within 72 hours after Priority 1 and 2 are complete]
, ...3 more...
)
Description: A parcel is a lot, block or other area in which land is held or into which land is subdivided. A parcel is part of the Cadastral mapping provided by BC Land Title & Survey. All parcels have been digitized from BC Land Title survey plans. Each parcel contains a Parcel Identifier (PID) which is a nine-digit number that uniquely identifies a parcel in the land title register of in British Columbia. The registrar assigns PID numbers to parcels for which a title is being entered in the computer register as a registered title. The Land Title Act refers to the PID as the permanent parcel identifier. Parcels within this dataset are the best representation that we can achieve by creating the overall parcel fabric and may not be an exact representation of what is outlined on the BC Land Title Survey plan. These parcel boundaries are for viewing purposes only. Please refer to the Legal plan for exact dimensions and locations.