{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "", "guid": "", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "This dataset was generated to publish an aggregated set of parcel polygons for as many North Carolina counties as practical to serve business needs that require information from multiple counties, e.g., response to a natural disaster, analysis of economic development potential, environmental assessments, and highway planning to name a few. An aggregated cadastral dataset serves to support and assist governmental agencies and others in resource management decisions. Additionally, these data provide a set of core attributes defined by the Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange project with the intention of adoption by the North Carolina Geographic Information Coordinating Council to update the current North Carolina Content Elements for Statewide Publication of Core Geospatial Parcel Data. The aggregated dataset is intended to facilitate the sharing, display, and use of cadastral data across the state, with the goal of building a seamless parcel map for North Carolina.\n\nNOTE: To download parcels by county DO NOT use the map. Instead, click the Download button and then click \"Download parcels by county or all counties at once.\"", "description": "
NOTE<\/SPAN>: To download parcels by county DO NOT use the map. Instead, click the Download button and then click \"Download parcels by county or all counties at once.\"<\/SPAN><\/SPAN><\/P> <\/P> This digital geospatial dataset represents parcel boundaries with standard core attributes for a collection of parcel data from North Carolina county data producers and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. The Integrated Cadastral Data Exchange project transformed source datasets from county data producers to create a standardized dataset with consistent attributes (fields). The individual standardized county datasets were aggregated into a single dataset. The aggregated parcel dataset includes all 100 counties in North Carolina plus lands of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. The source geometry is retained as published by individual county data producers. This dataset includes attributes such as ownership, area in acres, assessed value, and other core cadastral attributes. Web services have both polygons (parcel boundaries) and points representing each property, placed at or near the geometric center, with the same set of attributes.<\/SPAN><\/P>