Description: Tree Sites, with or without trees planted at the site and including both historic and proposed tree sites, that are of interest to the City of Boulder, CO for any reason. Most tree sites in this dataset are maintained by the City of Boulder Urban Forestry Division of the Department of Parks and Recreation but some are maintained by other departments or by private individuals. State Champion and Notable trees are included regardless of owner.
Copyright Text: City of Boulder Department of Parks and Recreation Forestry Division
AGERATE
(
type: esriFieldTypeString, alias: Age Rating, length: 50
, Coded Values:
[2 to 5 years old: 2 to 5 years old]
, [5 to 12 years old: 5 to 12 years old]
, [All Ages: All Ages]
, ...3 more...
)
Description: The Furniture Feature Class includes point locations for benches, picnic tables, grills, bike racks, and other public furniture assets in City of Boulder properties that are maintained and/or managed by the Department of Parks and Recreation.Source Document: Park Furniture Asset Management and Data Dictionary, https://cityofboulder.sharepoint.com/sites/ParksRec/Planning/GIS/Shared%20Documents/Metadata/FurnitureAssetManagementDataDictionary.docx
Copyright Text: Dennis Warrington, Christina Spielman, City of Boulder Department of Parks and Recreation
Description: Park Signs that are not part of the Transportation Sign Database, includes special signs, monument signs, and park specific regulatory signs.
Description: Park Structures owned by the City of Boulder and maintained and/or occupied by the Department of Parks and Recreation. Related table is intended to be joined with the City of Boulder Buildings data for boundary and other basic information.
Copyright Text: City of Boulder Department of Parks and Recreation
Description: Pools - both indoor and outdoor - maintained by the City of Boulder. Also includes Splash Pads and Pool Decks. Pool play features can be found in the Play Equipment feature class.
Copyright Text: City of Boulder, Department of Parks and Recreation
Description: Horticulture assets represent spatially defined and managed plant beds or planned rock beds that are not intended to be paths. These beds may include annual and/or perennial plants, shrubs, trees, or a mixture of plant types. Areas of native or natural vegetation that are confined to small areas and that are managed with other uses of adjacent assets in mind, such as pockets of vegetation along greenways, should be classified in the Horticulture feature class (or dataset) as opposed to the Parks and Recreation Natural Lands feature class (these small areas don’t typically have high value as a ‘natural’ area). Generally, Horticulture assets are not mowed but there may be occasional exceptions to this rule. Horticulture assets may or may not include irrigation. Tree grates are not included unless there are other plants in that space that require regular maintenance besides the tree alone. Horticulture assets are mapped as polygons which provides a general maintenance area that is helpful in calculating time and costs associated with the asset depending on the level of service expected (mode of the park) and on the type of Horticulture asset.Source Document: Park Horticulture Asset Management and Data Dictionary,
Copyright Text: Dennis Warrington, Christina Spielman
Description: This data was derived from the 2016 Planimetrics parking lot data. It shares a topology with road areas, driveways, sidewalk areas, and other impervious features.
Description: Lights owned or maintained by the City of Boulder or located on City of Boulder maintained properties or right of ways. Does not include all Xcel street lights.
Description: Through a set of programs including cultural grants, public art, initiatives for artists, the creative economy, and research, the Office of Arts and Culture seeks to facilitate an alignment in the community around our collective Vision for Culture: Together, we will craft Boulder’s social, physical, and cultural environment to include creativity as an essential ingredient for the well being, prosperity, and joy of everyone in the community. The Public Art Inventory is an integral to achieving this vision. The intent of this data is both for external communication about public art in Boulder but also to help operations staff manage these important community assets and provide decision makers analytical tools to understand where opportunities for public art in our community exist and more.Source Document: Art Asset Management and Data Dictionary, https://cityofboulder.sharepoint.com/sites/ParksRec/Planning/GIS/Shared%20Documents/Metadata/ArtAssetManagementDataDictionary.docx