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ACTmapi - ACTGOV DIVISION
The ACT Divisions are a region defined for land administration and the legal description of land parcels. Division boundaries may overlap District boundaries but must not overlap the ACT border. Division boundaries are defined by registered survey, and are subject to change. The ACT Divisions data set depicst the authoritative boundaries and names of suburbs for addressing and location purposes.
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ACTmapi - ACTGOV DISTRICT
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The ACT Districts Boundaries are a region defined for land administration and the legal description of land parcels. In urban areas districts contain divisions, sections and blocks. In rural areas they contain blocks only. The boundaries of districts are defined in metres and bounds form in the Districts Act 1966, and thus cannot be changed without changes to the legislation. A district may contain a number of divisions; however some divisions may be in two districts (e.g.Red Hill)
Greg Tankard - ACT Division Boundaries
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The ACT Divisions are a region defined for land administration and the legal description of land parcels. Division boundaries may overlap District boundaries but must not overlap the ACT border. Division boundaries are defined by registered survey, and are subject to change. Creative Commons License Creative Common By Attribution 4.0 (Australian Capital Territory), Please read Data Terms and Conditions statement before data use.
ACTmapi - ACTGOV SECTION
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Sections are a small grouping of blocks (usually less than 50) defined for land administration purposes. The dataset depicts the authoritative boundaries of a collection of blocks with the urban area (rural area has no sections). Section boundaries : do not overlap each other or Districts and Divisions. are often defined using physical features such as roads, so as to aggregate a manageable number of blocks of similar type. are shared with blocks and divisions.exist only within urban areas.
Greg Tankard - ACT District Boundaries
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The ACT Districts Boundaries are a region defined for land administration and the legal description of land parcels. In urban areas districts contain divisions, sections and blocks. In rural areas they contain blocks only. The boundaries of districts are defined in metes and bounds form in the Districts Act 1966, and thus cannot be changed without changes to the legislation. Creative Commons License Creative Common By Attribution 4.0 (Australian Capital Territory), Please read Data Terms and Conditions statement before data use.
ACTmapi - ACTGOV BORDER
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The ACT Boundary is a single region defined for land administration and the legal description of the Australian Capital Territory. The ACT boundary is defined in metes and bounds in the in the Districts Act 1966, and cannot be changed without changes to the legislation. The ACT Border was first defined by surveyors between 1910 and 1915, it was redefined by surveyors again between 2003 and 2008. The original border is defined by metes and bounds description in the Seat of Governance ACT 1909, the current ACT Border definition is shown on survey plans held at the ACT Environment, Planning and Sustainable Delivery Directorate. The ACT Boundary is 306 kilometers, covering an area of 2,358 kilometers squared. The ACT is bounded by the Goulburn-Cooma railway line in the east, the watershed of Naas Creek in the south, the watershed of the Cotter River in the west.Coordinate System is MGA2020-55 (EPSG #7855).
ACTmapi - ACTGOV UNIT
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The attributes of an area of land identified as an individual unit on a Units Plan, and subject to an individual lease within the unit development shown on the same Units Plan. Class B Units represent a footprint of a residential or commercial unit on the ground. The boundary is defined by a surveyed line around the land the unit sits on. Unit boundaries are created by entering data that has been submitted by registered unit plans.
ACTmapi - ACTGOV TP LAND USE ZONE
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Zoning determines how the land can be used and what can be built. These differences are shown by a different colour in the Territory Plan Map. There are 23 different zones which are divided into 7 main groups: Residential; Commercial; Industrial; Community Facility; Parks and Recreation; Transport and Services; and Non Urban Zones.The Territory Plan is the key statutory planning document in the ACT, providing the policy framework for the administration of planning in the ACT. It is changed from time to time due to social, economic and environmental reasons. The Territory Plan is used to manage development, in particular the way in which land is used and what can be built. It is used in assessment of development applications and to guide the development of new estate areas (future urban land). Land in the ACT is divided into sections and blocks. Each block has a zone and in some (rare) cases, more than one zone may apply to a block.
ACTmapi - ACTGOV ACCESS RESTRICTIONS
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Coordinate System is MGA2020-55 (EPSG #7855). The physical boundary between two road reserve segments that prevents vehicular access; or the boundary of applicability of a road name between two road reserve segments that do not belong to the same road where one road runs into another (and hence there is no physical boundary or indication). The type of physical boundary relevant in each case is defined by the VEHICLE_RESTRICTION_FLAG attribute. A value of 0 is "Unrestricted Delimeter" and 1 is "Restricted R-Section".
ACTmapi - ACTGOV BLOCK
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The position and extents of a parcel of land, usually the smallest unit of land that can be held under an individual lease without a requirement for further subdivision. URBAN blocks are defined as blocks that appear within a division and have division and section identifiers. RURAL blocks do not usually appear within a division, but may do so if they remain from before the division was created. Blocks may have a lifecycle stage or Proposed, Registered, Approved, Occupied or Retired.PROPOSED: The block is proposed but has not reached any other stage.REGISTERED: The block appears on a Deposited Plan that has been registered with the Land Titles Office.APPROVED: The block appears on an Approved Plan that has been signed by the Territory Planning Section and the Project Officer for the development.OCCUPIED: The block is leased, but does not appear on a registered plan. Leases over unregistered blocks may not be registered at the Land Titles Office, so this stage is used for unregistered blocks with unregistered leases. This normally only occurs in rural areas.RETIRED: Retirement of a block occurs when it is replaced by another block.Note that block boundaries may not always align exactly. The legal definition of a block is defined in the Deposited plan.
ACTmapi - ACTGOV LICENCE
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Contracts conferring a secondary interest in a block of land for some particular purpose, and covering several blocks, a block or only part of a block