The water area of Red Chute, LA was 0 in 2011.

Land Area

Water Area

Land area is a measurement providing the size, in square miles, of the land portions of geographic entities for which the Census Bureau tabulates and disseminates data. Area is calculated from the specific boundary recorded for each entity in the Census Bureau's geographic database. Land area is based on current information in the TIGER® data base, calculated for use with Census 2010.

Water Area figures include inland, coastal, Great Lakes, and territorial sea water. Inland water consists of any lake, reservoir, pond, or similar body of water that is recorded in the Census Bureau's geographic database. It also includes any river, creek, canal, stream, or similar feature that is recorded in that database as a two- dimensional feature (rather than as a single line). The portions of the oceans and related large embayments (such as Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound), the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea that belong to the United States and its territories are classified as coastal and territorial waters; the Great Lakes are treated as a separate water entity. Rivers and bays that empty into these bodies of water are treated as inland water from the point beyond which they are narrower than 1 nautical mile across. Identification of land and inland, coastal, territorial, and Great Lakes waters is for data presentation purposes only and does not necessarily reflect their legal definitions.

Above charts are based on data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey | ODN Dataset | API - Notes:

1. ODN datasets and APIs are subject to change and may differ in format from the original source data in order to provide a user-friendly experience on this site.

2. To build your own apps using this data, see the ODN Dataset and API links.

3. If you use this derived data in an app, we ask that you provide a link somewhere in your applications to the Open Data Network with a citation that states: "Data for this application was provided by the Open Data Network" where "Open Data Network" links to http://opendatanetwork.com. Where an application has a region specific module, we ask that you add an additional line that states: "Data about REGIONX was provided by the Open Data Network." where REGIONX is an HREF with a name for a geographical region like "Seattle, WA" and the link points to this page URL, e.g. http://opendatanetwork.com/region/1600000US5363000/Seattle_WA

Geographic and Area Datasets Involving Red Chute, LA

  • API

    Ubicación geográfica de la red de parques del municipio de Valledupar

    www.datos.gov.co | Last Updated 2024-04-21T03:27:35.000Z

    Ubicación geográfica de la red de parques públicos del municipio de Valledupar

  • API

    Traffic Camera

    data.brla.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-19T14:10:55.000Z

    Point geometry with attributes displaying Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development traffic cameras in the Greater Baton Rouge, Louisiana area.

  • API

    Green Infrastructure Water Capture Capacity

    data.lacity.org | Last Updated 2020-11-30T17:22:16.000Z

    Green infrastructure is designed to capture and infiltrate or filter stormwater runoff through natural systems. This dataset is used in combination with precipitation numbers to update the stormwater dashboard (in progress) and Sustainable City pLAn. It is refreshed as new projects are created.

  • API

    Average Water Network Capacity by Hexagon Area

    data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2023-09-19T21:55:50.000Z

    This dataset provides the average water network capacity (2023) within 200m x 200m hexagons, in Litres/second, for the City of Edmonton. The following colours describe the capacity of the city block area water system under computer-simulated conditions using EPCOR-owned hydrants: Red: 0-50 L/s Yellow: 50-100 L/s Light Green: 100-150 L/s Dark Green: 150-200 L/s Teal: 200-250 L/s Blue: 250-300 L/s Purple: 300 L/s and up No Data: No EPCOR-owned hydrants in Area Important Considerations: * EPCOR provides this data for information purposes only. EPCOR makes no guarantee, representation or warranty, express or implied, including that the data is true, accurate, complete, fit for a specific purpose or non-infringing, and no responsibility of any kind is accepted by EPCOR or EPCOR representatives for the completeness or accuracy of the data. EPCOR and its affiliates and their respective officers, directors, employees and other representatives shall not be liable to any person or entity as a result of the use or other handling of the data. * The hexagon grid utilized to present the average water network capacity data has been updated by EPCOR. As such, this version of the dataset should not be directly compared to previous versions of this dataset. * The average water network capacity is intended to be understood in a relative manner: e.g. a blue area is anticipated to provide higher flows on average than a green area. * Any city block area that indicates 0-50 L/s water network capacity has been evaluated by Edmonton Fire Rescue Services (EFRS). EFRS does not associate any significant risk with these areas and can adapt a response to a fire event in these areas given the small geographical area and buildings affected. * The results presented in this data were determined using computer modelling software that represented the distribution and transmission water network current in EWS's digital records as of February 16, 2023. Modifications to the water system after this date may change the water network capacity at any given time or place. * The results presented in this data represent the overall average water network capacity in an area during computer-simulated conditions at EPCOR-owned hydrants. Other factors may change the water network capacity at any given time or place. *The results presented in this data are not representative of lot-level available fire flow as outlined in the Volume 4 Design and Construction Standards. * The average water network capacity ranges are only indicative of average system capacity and not indicative of EPCOR-owned hydrant spacing. A development may still require infrastructure upgrades to meet minimum hydrant spacing requirements. * This map is not a substitute for directed engineering inquiries regarding infrastructure improvements to support development. Please contact EPCOR Water at wtrdc@epcor.com to determine fire protection requirements for development.

  • API

    Informe Productividad - Prestación De Servicios Promoción Y Prevención- 16 Ips Adscritas A Red Salud Casanare Ese – Enero 2019 a Noviembre 2019

    www.datos.gov.co | Last Updated 2024-04-01T15:51:50.000Z

    A continuación se relacionan los pacientes atendidos en Red Salud Casanare ESE, en cada uno de los servicios – Enero 1 a Noviembre 30 de 2019.

  • API

    Existing Buildings Energy & Water Efficiency (EBEWE) Program

    data.lacity.org | Last Updated 2024-09-29T08:01:05.000Z

    The City's Existing Buildings Energy & Water Efficiency (EBEWE) Program was established in 2016 (LA Municipal Code Section 91.9701, Ordinance No. 184674) and is administered by the Department of Building and Safety(LADBS). It requires that owners of buildings subject to the Ordinance, to annually register their building (includes pay fees) and file a benchmark report of energy and water usage for their buildings for the Compliance Year. The EBEWE dataset includes the Compliance Year, Building Address, Compliance Status, various energy and water use benchmark data, and the last 3 digits of the Assessor Identification Number (AIN). For a complete explanation of the Program, including reporting requirements, please visit LADBS' EBEWE site at http://www.ladbs.org/services/green-building-sustainability/existing-buildings-energy-water-efficiency-program.

  • API

    Captaciones por rangos

    www.datos.gov.co | Last Updated 2024-09-17T20:15:31.000Z

    La información corresponde al saldo, número de cuentas y número de clientes de las principales captaciones por rangos de salarios mínimos mensuales legales vigentes y la fuente de la captación (red de oficinas y/o área de tesorería) de los establecimientos de crédito. La actualización del conjunto de datos depende de la publicación oficial de dichos datos en la página web de la SFC.

  • API

    OLAS Population-based Water Stress and Risk Dataset for Latin America and the Caribbean

    mydata.iadb.org | Last Updated 2023-06-15T08:22:16.000Z

    LAC is the most water-rich region in the world by most metrics; however, water resource distribution throughout the region does not correspond demand. To understand water risk throughout the region, this dataset provides population and land area estimates for factors related to water risk, allowing users to explore vulnerability throughout the region to multiple dimensions of water risk. This dataset contains estimates of populations living in areas of water stress and risk in 27 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) at the municipal level. The dataset contains categories of 18 factors related to water risk and 39 indices of water risk and population estimates within each with aggregations possible at the basin, state, country, and regional level. The population data used to generate this dataset were obtained from the WorldPop project 2020 UN-adjusted population projections, while estimates of water stress and risk come from WRI’s Aqueduct 3.0 Water Risk Framework. Municipal administrative boundaries are from the Database of Global Administrative Areas (GADM). For more information on the methodology users are invited to read IADB Technical Note IDB-TN-2411: “Scarcity in the Land of Plenty”, and WRIs “Aqueduct 3.0: Updated Decision-relevant Global Water Risk Indicators”. | https://www.wri.org/data/aqueduct-global-maps-30-data | | https://www.worldpop.org/ | | https://gadm.org/ |

  • API

    Water Quality (LA)

    usc.data.socrata.com | Last Updated 2018-08-14T19:07:54.000Z

    </p> <p><a href="https://usc.data.socrata.com/stories/s/s54u-bkbd/" target="_blank"><b>Learn More</b></a></p>

  • API

    Average Monthly Residential Water Consumption by City Block Area (Multi-Year)

    data.edmonton.ca | Last Updated 2020-10-29T15:04:43.000Z

    This dataset provides the average (annual, winter, summer) residential metered water consumption (by year) within 400 m x 400m hexagons (approximately two city blocks) provided in m3/month for the City of Edmonton. Average monthly residential winter water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: January, February, March, April, October, November and December. Average monthly residential summer water consumption is the average consumption of the following months: May, June, July, August and September. Only those hexagons that contain at least ten accounts are illustrated to ensure customer privacy. Residential consumption refers to water used primarily for domestic purposes, where no more than four separate dwelling units are metered by a single water meter. Thematic mapping is based on the following ranges: 0-10 m3/month – orange 10-20 m3/month – green 20-30 m3/month – purple 30-35 m3/month – blue 35-60 m3/month – red 60 m3/month and up – maroon