LBCS Structure Dimension with Descriptions
Structure is one of five dimensions in LBCS. Each dimension is an attribute that takes the appropriate four-digit code.
Code |
Structures with Descriptions |
Color |
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1000 | Residential buildings | #FFFF00 | |||
This is a catch-all category for all buildings built for residential purposes. |
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1100 |
Single-family buildings |
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Also includes any single-unit structure for habitation. The emphasis here is "single" and not "family." Includes split-level homes, linked group (houses that share foundations), manufactured homes, etc. |
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1110 |
Detached units |
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Standard single-family residential structures. |
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1120 |
Attached units |
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Usually two or more dwelling units side-by-side sharing one roof, but each unit has a separate front and rear access. |
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1121 |
Duplex structures |
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Generally a two-unit building that is divided horizontally, and each unit has a separate entrance from the outside or through a common vestibule. For semi-detached, double-duplexes, quadraplexes, maisonettes, etc., count the number of units in the structure and use the appropriate multifamily structure category. For applications that need to track the precise configuration, use additional fields or attributes in the land-use database. |
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1122 |
Zero lot line, row houses, etc. |
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This was a traditional planning category that is fast falling out of use. Many manufactured home developments are configured as zero lot line developments, townhouses are a form of zero lot line housing, and to further confuse the usage, former row houses are also used as barracks, group housing, or farm housing. Avoid this category if possible, but it is provided here for compatibility with many existing land-use databases that have this description. |
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1130 |
Accessory units |
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Use this category for an accessory unit, which is structurally separate and distinct from the main structure. An accessory unit is a second dwelling unit (structure-wise) that is added to an existing lot for use as a complete and independent facility. Note that not all accessory units have residential activities. For an accessory use (not structure) that is part of the main structure or not incidental to the primary use, classification options vary. Such a unit is also known as a "granny flat." See the working paper on Mixed Uses and Accessory Uses for a discussion of the full range of issues associated with accessory uses and their implications for land-use data classifications. |
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1140 |
Townhouses |
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A type of structure that has three or more separate dwelling units divided vertically, and each unit has separate entrances to a front and rear yard. |
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1150 |
Manufactured housing |
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Also commonly referred to as factory-built housing, which includes modular, mobile homes, and manufactured homes. The differences are subtle but, if a land-use application needs these finer gradations, create another attribute table to track the various kinds of factory-built housing. |
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1200 |
Multifamily structures |
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The following categories refer to the number of units and not by the number of floors or stories in the structure. For counting the number of households, have a separate field in the land-use database that lists the number of actual households in the building. For tracking the number of floors in a structure, use another attribute field. In short, this dimension is only for tracking the total number of units in a structure to get an indication of how big the structure is. |
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1202 |
Two Units |
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1203 |
Three Units |
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1204 |
Four Units |
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1205 |
Five Units |
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1206 |
Six Units |
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1207 |
Seven Units |
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1208 |
Eight Units |
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1209 |
Nine Units |
1210 |
Ten Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "up to ten units." |
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1211 |
Eleven Units |
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1212 |
Twelve Units |
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1213 |
Thirteen Units |
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1214 |
Fourteen Units |
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1215 |
Fifteen Units |
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1216 |
Sixteen Units |
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1217 |
Seventeen Units |
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1218 |
Eighteen Units |
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1219 |
Nineteen Units |
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1220 |
Twenty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between ten and twenty units." |
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1221 |
Twenty-one Units |
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1222 |
Twenty-two Units |
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1223 |
Twenty-three Units |
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1224 |
Twenty-four Units |
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1225 |
Twenty-five Units |
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1226 |
Twenty-six Units |
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1227 |
Twenty-seven Units |
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1228 |
Twenty-eight Units |
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1229 |
Twenty-nine Units |
1230 |
Thirty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between twenty and thirty units." |
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1231 |
Thirty-one Units |
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1232 |
Thirty-two Units |
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1233 |
Thirty-three Units |
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1234 |
Thirty-four Units |
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1235 |
Thirty-five Units |
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1236 |
Thirty-six Units |
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1237 |
Thirty-seven Units |
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1238 |
Thirty-eight Units |
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1239 |
Thirty-nine Units |
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1240 |
Forty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between thirty and forty units." |
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1241 |
Forty-one Units |
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1242 |
Forty-two Units |
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1243 |
Forty-three Units |
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1244 |
Forty-four Units |
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1245 |
Forty-five Units |
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1246 |
Forty-six Units |
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1247 |
Forty-seven Units |
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1248 |
Forty-eight Units |
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1249 |
Forty-nine Units |
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1250 |
Fifty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between forty and fifty units." |
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1251 |
Fifty-one Units |
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1252 |
Fifty-two Units |
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1253 |
Fifty-three Units |
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1254 |
Fifty-four Units |
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1255 |
Fifty-five Units |
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1256 |
Fifty-six Units |
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1257 |
Fifty-seven Units |
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1258 |
Fifty-eight Units |
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1259 |
Fifty-nine Units |
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1260 |
Sixty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between fifty and sixty units." |
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1261 |
Sixty-one Units |
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1262 |
Sixty-two Units |
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1263 |
Sixty-three Units |
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1264 |
Sixty-four Units |
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1265 |
Sixty-five Units |
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1266 |
Sixty-six Units |
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1267 |
Sixty-seven Units |
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1268 |
Sixty-eight Units |
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1269 |
Sixty-nine Units |
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1270 |
Seventy Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between sixty and seventy units." |
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1271 |
Seventy-one Units |
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1272 |
Seventy-two Units |
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1273 |
Seventy-three Units |
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1274 |
Seventy-four Units |
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1275 |
Seventy-five Units |
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1276 |
Seventy-six Units |
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1277 |
Seventy-seven Units |
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1278 |
Seventy-eight Units |
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1279 |
Seventy-nine Units |
1280 |
Eighty Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "between seventy and eighty units." |
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1281 |
Eighty-one Units |
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1282 |
Eighty-two Units |
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1283 |
Eighty-three Units |
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1284 |
Eighty-four Units |
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1285 |
Eighty-five Units |
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1286 |
Eighty-six Units |
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1287 |
Eighty-seven Units |
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1288 |
Eighty-eight Units |
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1289 |
Eighty-nine Units |
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1290 |
Ninety Units |
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When using a three-level coding scheme, apply this category to mean "more than eighty units." |
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1291 |
Ninety-one Units |
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1292 |
Ninety-two Units |
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1293 |
Ninety-three Units |
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1294 |
Ninety-four Units |
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1295 |
Ninety-five Units |
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1296 |
Ninety-six Units |
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1297 |
Ninety-seven Units |
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1298 |
Ninety-eight Units |
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1299 |
Ninety-nine Units and more |
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1300 |
Other specialized residential structures |
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For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1310 |
Barracks |
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Primarily associated with housing for uniformed services (police, military, etc.). For tracking number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1320 |
Dormitories |
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Primarily associated with an institution that provides sleeping units and communal dining facilities. For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1330 |
Hotels, motels, and tourist courts |
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For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1340 |
Single room occupancy units |
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Historically, many hotels and motels are converted to SROs. Even new SRO buildings are structurally no different from hotels. But many have small cooking facilities (independent or common) and other amenities not associated with a hotel. SROs may also have building code specifications different from hotels and motels. For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1350 |
Temporary structures, tents, etc. for shelter |
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For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
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1360 |
Other structurally converted buildings |
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This is a catch-all category for all other residential structure types that do not easily classify in any of the other residential categories. For tracking the number of occupants, guest rooms, or beds, use additional attributes or fields in the land-use database. |
2000 | Commercial buildings and other specialized structures | #FF0000 | |||
Use this as a catch-all category when sufficient detail about structure types are not available (for example, when using remotely sensed data). |
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2100 |
Office or bank building |
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Buildings constructed for office-type uses. Typically these buildings constitute the majority of nonresidential structures in a community. |
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2110 |
Office building with drive-through facility |
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An office building with drive-in windows to serve customers in automobiles. |
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2200 |
Store or shop building |
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Most retail stores fall in this category. Use this as a catch-all category when sufficient detail about structure types are not available (for example, when using remotely sensed data). |
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2210 |
Shop or store building with drive-through facility |
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A building with drive-in windows to serve customers in automobiles. |
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2220 |
Restaurant building |
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Restaurant buildings that serve food for customers for consumption on or off premises. These structures may also be characterized by specialized cooking, serving, and health and hygiene equipment. |
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2230 |
Standalone store or shop building |
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A catch-all category for most commercial and retail business structures. |
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2240 |
Department store building |
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These buildings are characterized by large commercial spaces for retail or wholesale sales although they may be reconfigured for other uses. Use this category for urban and downtown department stores that look similar to office or standalone store, but have specialized building features (store fronts, display windows, large atriums, etc.). |
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2250 |
Warehouse discount store building |
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These structures are primarily warehouse in structural character, but also have other structural features convenient for large discount stores and "big-box retail" establishments. |
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2260 |
Market shops including open markets |
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Structures in this category include typical market shops and farmers markets with or without outdoor sales and service areas in single or groups of buildings with stalls for retail or wholesale commercial activities. |
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2270 |
Gasoline station |
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Structures that are specialized for selling gasoline with storage tanks, often underground or hidden. They may have bays for car washes. For convenience stores that sell gasoline, use the convenience store category. |
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2280 |
Automobile repair and service structures |
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Includes service garages and other structures that have bays for automobile service. These are specialized structures for auto repair and service. |
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2300 |
Office or store building with residence on top |
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Use this category for areas that the land-use database is not recording as multiple uses in a structure. Structurally, they may have some unique characteristics. Many planning applications in older neighborhoods can apply this category for large portions of their inventory. |
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2400 |
Office building over storefronts |
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This is a catch-all category to differentiate office buildings with street-level retail uses from a purely office building. Structurally, they are similar to a regular office building but vary in their treatment of street-level portion of the structure. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2500 |
Malls, shopping centers, or collection of shops |
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Shopping center refers to a group of retail establishments that are located (and sometimes managed) as a single property. Most provide on-site parking, and their size and configuration reflect the kinds of merchandise and trade area characteristics. The two basic structure types are malls and open-air strip centers. |
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2510 |
Neighborhood center (convenience with one or more anchors) |
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Usually configured as a straight-line strip with no enclosed walkway or mall area; sometimes a canopy may connect the storefronts. |
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2520 |
Community center (general merchandise with two or more anchors) |
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Usually configured as a strip (straight line, "U", or "L" shaped) center. Of all the varieties of shopping centers, these are by far the most common type and are configured in the widest range. Other terms used to describe this type are: discount centers (if anchored by a discount store), or off-price centers (if anchored by an off-price retailer). |
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2530 |
Regional center (enclosed mall with two or more anchors) |
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Usually configured as an enclosed mall with an inward orientation of the stores and have common walkways with parking areas around the perimeter of the building. Sizes vary from 400,000 to 800,000 square feet on sites ranging from 40 to 100 acres, and have a 5- to 15-mile primary trade area radius. Typically serves a region with general merchandise in full depth and variety. Apparel stores are usually the anchors. They may be traditional, mass merchant, or discount department variety. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2540 |
Superregional center (similar to regional, but has three or more anchors) |
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Usually configured as an enclosed mall and may even have multiple levels. Sizes vary from 800,000 square feet and above on sites ranging from 60 to 120 acres, and have a 5- to 25-mile primary trade area radius. Typically serves the same purpose as a regional center, only with more anchors. Other terms used for this category include "super off-price malls" and "mega mall." Several anchors (three or more) offer more variety and depth of merchandise than a regional center. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2550 |
Fashion/specialty center (higher end, fashion-oriented stores) |
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Usually configured as a mall, emphasizing rich decor and landscaping. Sizes vary from 80,000 to 250,000 square feet on sites ranging from 5 to 25 acres, and have a 5- to 15-mile primary trade area radius. Typically has upscale shopping. Also known as vertical market center. It need not have an anchor, but if it does, it is usually an apparel shop. Sometimes restaurants and entertainment play the anchor role. Other shops include boutiques and craft shops that offer unique merchandise of high quality and price. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2560 |
Power center (category-dominated anchors with few small tenants) |
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Usually configured as a collection of several freestanding anchors and a few, if any, small tenants. |
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2570 |
Theme or festival center (leisure, tourist-oriented, restaurants) |
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Mostly located in urban areas and sometimes adapted to historic buildings or other related urban activities nearby. They can also be one component of a large mixed-use project. |
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2580 |
Outlet or discount center (manufacturer outlet stores) |
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Strip configuration is the most common format, but others include malls and "village cluster." Many also have outdoor sales areas. Sizes vary from 50,000 to 400,000 square feet on sites ranging from 10 to 50 acres (some may be as big an 100 acres), and have a 25- to 75-mile primary trade area radius. |
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2590 |
Other kinds of shopping centers |
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These categories are mainly for those applications that may want further differentiation. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2591 |
Convenience stores or centers |
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Usually configured as a stand-alone store from the smallest size to a few thousand square feet of space. It is typically anchored by a mini-mart, gas station, or a 24-hour general store. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. For gas stations, use the gasoline service station category. |
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2592 |
Home improvement center |
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Structurally, these centers are no different from other types of store buildings. Sometimes, they have outdoor sales or storage of merchandise. Sizes vary from a few hundred to several thousand square feet of enclosed space. Such a center is typically anchored by a hardware, furniture, carpet, or other store specializing in merchandise for home improvement. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2593 |
Car care center |
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Structurally, they are similar to other store buildings, but some may include repair garages, car washes, and other similar automobile-specific construction. Typical functions include sales of auto parts, auto repairs, tires, and other auto-related merchandise. Track the establishments in this type of structure by applying the appropriate code(s) from the function dimension. |
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2600 |
Industrial buildings and structures |
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Use this as a catch-all category when sufficient detail about structure types are not available (for example, when using remotely sensed data). |
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2610 |
Light industrial structures and facilities |
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Many industrial structures were described by their roof design (saw tooth, monitor, etc.). But modern industrial structures may look no different from an office building. |
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2611 |
Loft building |
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Multistoried industrial building, often with higher ceilings and wider columns than a comparable office building. They are popular structures for rehab to residential activities. Other rehab adaptations include art galleries, selling books, computer data centers, mail order centers, and general office space. |
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2612 |
Mill-type factory structures |
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These are older single or multistory factories, common in many older industrial areas, and supported by large wood beams and columns. They are popular structures for rehab to activities that are not industrial (art galleries, book selling, computer data centers, mail order centers, etc.). For lumber mills, see the agricultural facilities category. |
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2613 |
One-story modern manufacturing plants |
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Many newer industrial structures may look and generate impacts like a typical office building, but they rely on special power, water, or waste disposal systems for operations. |
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2614 |
Industrial parks |
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Also known as research and development parks, these are one or more buildings used for light industrial activities, often by several independent enterprises, that may share common loading, parking, and business services. Sometimes they are also referred to as business incubators that are similar to a light industrial structure but differ in the duration of tenancy (incubators only lease for a year to two to help a business in its initial development). Industrial malls, structurally, are like business incubators, but without tenancy restrictions. |
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2615 |
Laboratory or specialized industrial facility |
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A catch-all category for unique and specialized structures that cannot be easily classified under light industrial structures. |
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2620 |
Heavy industrial structures and facilities |
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Typically the largest facilities in a community, these structures house complex operations, some of which might be continuous (operated 24 hours a day, seven days a week). Because these facilities are constructed for specific occupants, they have a high degree of obsolescence. Because the subcategories mirror those used by industrial property appraisers, appraisal data sets may already contain some or all these distinctions. |
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2621 |
Assembly and construction-type plants |
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A typical heavy manufacturing facility. |
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2622 |
Process plants (metals, chemicals, etc.) |
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Process sometimes also applies to oil refineries, which are categorized separately. |
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2630 |
Oil refinery facility |
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Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
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2631 |
Refinery with anchored equipment < 100,000 barrels/day |
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2632 |
Refinery with unanchored equipment < 100,000 barrels/day |
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2633 |
Refinery with anchored equipment > 100,000 barrels/day |
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2634 |
Refinery with unanchored equipment > 100,000 barrels/day |
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2635 |
Refinery pumping plant with anchored equipment |
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2636 |
Refinery pumping plant with unanchored equipment |
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2700 |
Warehouse or storage facility |
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Includes public storage, mini-warehouse, mini-storage, and other storage buildings. |
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2710 |
Mini-warehouse |
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2720 |
High-rise mini-warehouse |
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2730 |
Warehouse structure |
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Does not include grain elevator structures; they should be classified in agricultural structures. |
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2740 |
Produce warehouse |
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Specialized warehouse structures for storing, sorting, repackaging, and, sometimes, wholesale selling of produce. |
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2750 |
Refrigerated warehouse or cold storage |
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Large industrialized warehouse structures with specialized cold storage and climate control facilities. |
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2760 |
Large area distribution or transit warehouse |
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A subcategory for specifying large warehouse structures that occupy several acres of land. |
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2770 |
Wharf and dock shed |
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Waterfront structures for marine and water-based enterprises. |
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2780 |
Tank farms |
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Tanks that primarily store fuel, oil, and other liquid products (except water). Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
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2781 |
Tank farms with anchored tanks |
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2782 |
Tank farms with unanchored tanks |
3000 | Public assembly structures | #A020F0 | ||
An essential category for many planning applications related to public safety, transportation, and emergency management. The subcategories give a broad variety of public assembly but, if your application needs more precision, create subcategories at the four-digit level under the appropriate broader category. |
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3100 |
Theater |
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Theaters are specialized structures for housing dramatic presentations, stage entertainments, motion- picture shows, and similar events that entail mass assembly of people. Most theaters have a stage or a screen for viewing. Some theaters may also have more than one stage for the same viewing area or have multiple screens (one on each wall of the |
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3110 |
Performance theater |
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Includes concert halls and other structures with fixed seats arranged on a sloped or stepped floor; may seat 300 to 3,000 people. |
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3120 |
Movie theater |
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A movie theater is a specialized theater for showing movies or motion pictures. The primary structural difference between a theater and a movie theater is the projection screen. However, many movie theaters can be easily adapted for stage performances and many stages have folding screens for movie projections. Although screen shapes are mostly rectangular, they come in a variety of shapes. Also, some special-purpose multimedia movie theaters use multiple screens (one on each wall face) or the entire ceiling surface, which are sometimes curved or geodesic in shape. Other terms used to describe these structures include talkies, cinema theaters, and motion pictures. This category also includes cineplexes — complex structures with multiple movie theaters, each theater capable of providing performances independent of the others in the complex. Structurally, theaters in a cineplex are grouped in a manner that allows them to share box or ticket offices, parking facilities, lobby areas, restrooms, concession stands, signs and marquee displays, and other service and maintenance facilities. These structures first started appearing in shopping centers and malls, sometimes integrated with the layout of the mall. Historically, a cineplex meant a theater complex with two or more movie theaters. Popular configurations have nine or twelve theaters. But as structures evolved to accommodate twenty or more theaters, the movie-theater industry started using such terms as multiplex, megaplex, and mega theater to differentiate these newer configurations from older cineplex layout. But there is no clear structural distinction between a cineplex and a megaplex. The distinction between a cineplex and a megaplex has been further blurred because developers sometimes retrofit cineplexes with more screens, often smaller, within the existing structure. |
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3130 |
Amphitheater |
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Some can accommodate 15,000 to 20,000 spectators. Modern versions have fixed seating (about 40% of capacity) under a roof (but no walls) and the remaining spectators spread out on sloping lawns. They are very popular for summer music concerts. |
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3140 |
Drive-in theaters |
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3200 |
Indoor games facility |
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Many bowling alleys, golf ranges, skating rinks, etc., do not have large spectator seating areas but cater to a large number of people playing in the facility. If necessary, create subcategories here for to differentiate between structures (skating rinks from golf ranges, for example). |
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3300 |
Sports stadium or arena |
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Structurally, the main distinction between a stadium and an arena is its size. Stadiums are larger than arenas and seat 40,000 to more than 100,000 spectators; arenas typically seat 8,000 to 22,000. The layout of seating and sight lines in stadiums follow a fixed sport (baseball or football), whereas arenas are designed around the flat, central space whose size is about the size of a basketball court. Arenas also host circuses, ice shows, indoor soccer, hockey games, horse shows, and music concerts. Increasingly, many stadiums, especially domed facilities, are serving arena-like events. |
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3400 |
Exhibition, convention, or conference structure |
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A typical exhibition hall facility occupies several city blocks and contains 50,000 to 700,000 square feet of contiguous flat floor space. These halls have high ceilings (25 to 35 feet) and can accommodate a variety of events. Some very large cities (Chicago, for example) have multilevel exhibition halls. Convention structures have both an exhibition hall and a number of meeting rooms. Many also have kitchen and banquet facilities, and an auditorium for special events. Trade shows, public shows, conventions, food functions, receptions, dances, banquets, assemblies, and other activities are typically hosted in these structures. Multipurpose structures have combinations of exhibition, convention, and arena facilities. Some of these may be co-located or created out of a single enclosed space that is reconfigured. This category also includes the horseshoe-shaped auditorium buildings popular in the 1930s and 1940s in many midsize to big cities. These structures have a fixed stage at one end of a flat floor area on which were portable seats on risers and fixed seats on other levels. Multipurpose arenas have since replaced these kinds of structures. Trade centers are not included here. They are usually a special-purpose office building for a specific group of enterprises (brokers, importers, freight forwarders, etc.). These structures belong in the office building category. Merchandise marts also serve the same purpose as trade centers but also have permanent exhibit space (30,000 to 50,000 square feet) with lower ceilings than exhibition halls. These structures serve specific consumer-oriented industries (gifts, apparel, furniture, floor coverings, computers, etc.). Because many cities do not have such facilities, these trade groups often use existing exhibition and convention facilities. In Europe, exhibition hall facilities are also known as congress centers. |
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3500 |
Churches, synagogues, temples, mosques, etc. |
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These are specialized religious structures that have pulpits, choirs, musical instruments, such as organs, pianos, and bands, besides large seating areas. Some churches, mosques, temples and other similar religious structures may also have towers (bell towers in churches, minars in mosques, or pagodas in temples). Many religious structures also have classrooms (for Sunday school activities) and residential quarters for one or two families. But the structures are primarily designed for worship and religious congregations. Some modern wedding chapels and structures that accommodate a wide range of religious or social activities are also included here. Architecturally, church buildings have been known as either a schoolhouse, modern, traditional, courthouse, utility, or storefront churches. Except for the storefront variety, all these structures belong in this category. If an application needs to differentiate, use the definitions below to create subcategories. Schoolhouse churches look like one-room schoolhouses, typically frame-built in a rectangular shape with a double row of pews to define the cruciform aisle, and the pulpit centered at the head of the main aisle. Modern churches refer to the explosion of innovative church forms popular with designers after World War II. They take many shapes and sizes with visually striking features (large entrances, long masonry spires, etc.). Traditional churches refer to the standard rectangular plan with steep roof pitches, masonry built, and sometimes having tall bell towers or steeples. Courthouse churches reflect the 1875-1925 American municipal architecture of urban centers. These centers often included the town bank, city hall, post office, and other public uses along with a church building designed to look like the courthouse. Utility churches are buildings with low roofs, often constructed of concrete blocks, sometimes with vinyl sidings, and pointed or spiked steeples, if any. They primarily serve small independent denominations. Not included in this category: Storefront churches refer to a store or a similar structure not typically used for religious activities that is now used as a meeting place for a congregation. Structures adapted for congregations include barns, stores, warehouses, old public buildings, and single-family houses. The structure dimension should classify such structures in the appropriate structure category. Use the activity dimension to specify the religious congregation activities and the function dimension to identify the religious establishment. Megachurches are mostly large structures that can seat several thousand people and have a variety of amenities and host a wide range of activities. The main structure has a stage with a pulpit with arena-style seating. It may also include facilities for teaching, broadcasting, entertaining, and selling gifts, books, and other paraphernalia. They may also include a chapel for weddings and funerals. The architecture and interior design evoke a convention or civic center design and also generate similar traffic and impacts. Such structures should be classified under exhibition and convention center category. Any other facility that has been converted for religious events and congregations (houses, office buildings, community centers, etc.) |
||||
3600 |
Capitol buildings |
|||
Structures specialized for assembly of elected and other public officials to conduct public discourse. Although the main enclosure is similar to many stepped or raised floor plans of theaters and auditoriums, the overall structural characteristics of a capitol building includes other structures and facilities associated with office-type activities. |
||||
3700 |
Covered or partially covered atriums and public enclosures |
|||
Often found in downtown locations that provide shelter for large public gatherings and communal activities. |
||||
3800 |
Other community structures |
|||
This is a catch-all category for all other mass assembly structures, including community halls, reception halls, wedding halls, etc. |
||||
3900 |
Passenger assembly |
|||
3910 |
Mixed mode terminal |
|||
3920 |
Airport terminal |
|||
3930 |
Bus terminal |
|||
3940 |
Train station |
|||
Create subcategories if applications require specific train station type (long distance versus transit). But many long distance stations also serve transit and local trains. |
||||
3950 |
Harbor or port terminal |
4000 | Institutional or community facilities | #0000FF | |||
Use this as a catch-all category when sufficient detail about structure types are not available (for example, when using remotely sensed data). |
|||||
4100 |
Medical facility |
||||
4110 |
Hospital building |
||||
4120 |
Medical clinic building |
||||
4200 |
School or university buildings |
||||
4210 |
Grade school |
||||
4220 |
College or university facility |
||||
4230 |
Trade or specialty school facility |
||||
4300 |
Library building |
||||
4400 |
Museum, exhibition, or similar facility |
||||
4410 |
Exhibitions and art galleries |
||||
4420 |
Planetarium |
||||
4430 |
Aquarium |
||||
4440 |
Outdoor facility, no major structure |
||||
4450 |
Zoological parks |
||||
Besides the normal viewing and tourist areas, zoos may also have special structures and enclosures for various zoological and botanical habitats. They also have extensive veterinary and animal services along with associated administration buildings. When a zoo is part of a larger park, for example, a state park, use the appropriate site dimension category to identify such land-use characteristics. |
|||||
4500 |
Public safety-related facility |
||||
4510 |
Fire and rescue station |
||||
4520 |
Police station |
||||
4530 |
Emergency operation center |
||||
4600 |
Jails, penitentiaries, detention centers, and other correctional facilities |
||||
4700 |
Cemetery, monument, tombstone, or mausoleum |
||||
The three traditional cemetery types are: the monument cemetery, the lawn cemetery, and the garden memorial park. Each is a distinct facility type, although it may appear that the main difference is in the way the site is developed. The monument cemetery, which evolved from ancient churchyard burial grounds, has stone memorials. The lawn cemetery, features lawns with extensive landscaping and looks like a park, and the memorials are sometimes bronze. They evolved from a need to have wide public acceptance for new cemeteries. The garden memorial park is a logical extension of the lawn cemetery with elaborate sculptures and architectural features that counter the monotonous lawns and memorials. Memorials in all types of cemeteries vary from a simple tombstone to elaborate mausoleums. Many plans recognize the open space quality of cemeteries by placing jogging and bike trails adjacent to such areas. Also, some cemeteries have allowed other recreational uses on unplotted parts of the property. Classify or capture such uses of a cemetery in the activity dimension. |
|||||
4800 |
Funeral homes and cremation facilities |
||||
Land-use plans traditionally treated such facilities as serving a community function. Even though many funeral homes now are for-profit enterprises, for lack of a more suitable category, this facility type remains in the community facility category. |
|||||
5000 | Transportation-related facilities | #BEBEBE | |||
5100 |
Linear or network feature |
||||
Many local land-use databases do not have parcel IDs for road segments, including rights-of-way. A typical community may have as much as 15% of its total land consumed by such linear features. Tracking the total amount of land consumed by such facilities is becoming increasingly critical for answering many planning applications. Even in cases where GIS-based maps ignore roads as a category when mapping, the underlying geometry has polygons assigned to the rights-of-way. This category is a way to assign a structure type for such polygons in the GIS, or for parcels that are road segments in the database. See the LBCS web site for further details about this issue. |
|||||
5110 |
Pedestrian trail, sidewalks, etc. |
||||
5120 |
Bicycle and other nonmotorized paths |
||||
5130 |
Highways and roads |
||||
The subcategories provided for roads follow the Federal Highway Administration's (FHWA) functional road classification scheme. This scheme explains to Metropolitan Planning Organizations how they can meet specific reporting requirements of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991. Many local and state agencies use the same categories for their local planning applications. The two additional subcategories, local and alley, provided below can capture some additional local road types. Local roads may be private or unfunded roads. Alleys are commonly used in denser urban areas. There is no color scheme for roads in most local planning applications; they are left white or colored black. Depending on the scale of the map (regional or statewide maps), roads are may be shown as dark (usually black) lines. But ISTEA reporting requirements specify the following scheme for regional or statewide maps: Interstate highways — Blue solid line. Other Freeways and expressways — Brown solid line. Other principal arterials — Red solid line. Minor arterials — Green solid line |
|||||
5131 |
Principal arterial — interstate |
||||
5132 |
Principal arterial — freeway and expressway |
||||
5133 |
Other principal arterial |
||||
5134 |
Minor arterial |
||||
5135 |
Major collector |
||||
5136 |
Minor collector |
||||
5137 |
Local road |
||||
5138 |
Alley |
||||
5139 |
Other nonclassified road |
||||
5140 |
Highway bridges and tunnels |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify this distinction. This category may be applicable when individual segments of roads are classified. For many local land-use applications, this linear facility (along with the right-of-way) may appear as a road segment. As local databases improve their accuracy, this category will increasingly become significant. |
|||||
5150 |
Railroads, including monorails, etc. |
||||
5160 |
Waterways |
||||
5200 |
Automobile parking facilities |
||||
5210 |
Surface parking, open |
||||
5220 |
Surface parking, covered |
||||
5230 |
Multistoried parking structure with ramps |
||||
5240 |
Underground parking structure with ramps |
||||
5250 |
Rooftop parking facility |
||||
5300 |
Bus stop shelter |
||||
5400 |
Bus or truck maintenance facility |
||||
5500 |
Water transportation or marine related |
||||
5510 |
Port fuel facility |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
5511 |
Port fuel facility with anchored tanks, with back-up power |
||||
5512 |
Port fuel facility with anchored tanks, without back-up power |
||||
5513 |
Port fuel facility with unanchored tanks, with back-up power |
||||
5514 |
Port fuel facility with unanchored tanks, without back-up power |
||||
5515 |
Port fuel facility with buried tanks |
||||
5520 |
Pier, dock, wharf, or jetty |
||||
5530 |
Lighthouse |
||||
5540 |
Riverboats and other anchored facilities |
||||
Includes riverboats and barges used for casinos, entertainment, residential, or other purposes. For anchored parts of such facilities, include them in this category as well. |
|||||
5550 |
Port storage or warehouse |
||||
5551 |
Stationary port handling equipment |
||||
5552 |
Rail mounted port handling equipment |
||||
5553 |
Port warehouses |
||||
5600 |
Air and space transportation facility |
||||
5610 |
Runway |
||||
5620 |
Airport maintenance and hangar facility |
||||
5630 |
Airport control tower |
||||
5640 |
Heliport facility |
||||
5650 |
Glideport, seaport, stolport, ultralight or baloonport facility |
||||
5700 |
Railroad facility |
||||
5710 |
Railroad switching facility |
||||
5720 |
Railroad sheds and other support structures |
6000 | Utility and other nonbuilding structures | #858585 | |||
6100 |
Utility structures on right-of-way |
||||
6110 |
Electric lines, phone and cable lines, etc. |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6111 |
Distribution circuits with seismically designed components |
||||
6112 |
Distribution circuits with standard components |
||||
6120 |
Gas and fuel lines |
||||
6130 |
Water supply lines |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6131 |
Brittle pipelines |
||||
6132 |
Ductile pipelines |
||||
6140 |
Steam and air conditioning lines |
||||
6150 |
Irrigation channels |
||||
6160 |
Sewer and waste water lines |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6161 |
Brittle pipelines |
||||
6162 |
Ductile pipelines |
||||
6200 |
Water-supply-related facility |
||||
6210 |
Water supply pump station |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6211 |
Pumping plant with anchored equipment < 10 MGD |
||||
6212 |
Pumping plant with unanchored equipment < 10 MGD |
||||
6213 |
Pumping plant with anchored equipment > 10 MGD |
||||
6214 |
Pumping plant with unanchored equipment >10 MGD |
||||
6220 |
Dam |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. These categories also match the facility types specified in the Federal Geographic Data Committee's facility standards. |
|||||
6221 |
Earth dam, arch |
||||
6222 |
Earth dam, multi-arch |
||||
6223 |
Buttress dam |
||||
6224 |
Gravity dam, rockfill |
||||
6225 |
Gravity dam, concrete |
||||
6226 |
Gravity dam, masonry |
||||
6227 |
Gravity dam, stone |
||||
6228 |
Gravity dam, timber crib |
||||
6230 |
Levee |
||||
6240 |
Culvert |
||||
6250 |
Water tank (elevated, at grade, underground) |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6251 |
On-ground anchored concrete tank |
||||
6252 |
On-ground unanchored concrete tank |
||||
6253 |
On-ground anchored steel tank |
||||
6254 |
On-ground unanchored steel tank |
||||
6255 |
Above ground steel tank |
||||
6256 |
On-ground wood tank |
||||
6257 |
Buried concrete tank |
||||
6260 |
Wells |
||||
6270 |
Water treatment and purification (WTP) facility |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6271 |
WTP with anchored components < 50 MGD |
||||
6272 |
WTP with unanchored components < 50 MGD |
||||
6273 |
WTP with anchored components 50-200 MGD |
||||
6274 |
WTP with unanchored components 50-200 MGD |
||||
6275 |
WTP with anchored components > 200 MGD |
||||
6276 |
WTP with unanchored components > 200 MGD |
||||
6280 |
Water reservoir |
||||
6290 |
Other irrigation facilities |
6300 |
Sewer and waste-related facility |
||||
6310 |
Storage or pumping station facility |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6311 |
Lift stations with anchored components < 10 MGD |
||||
6312 |
Lift stations with unanchored components < 10 MGD |
||||
6313 |
Lift stations with anchored components > 10 MGD |
||||
6314 |
Lift stations with unanchored components > 10 MGD |
||||
6320 |
Landfill facility |
||||
Area fill and trench fill are two commonly known facility types. The area method is employed to fill a depleted quarry pit, a canyon, or a natural depression. After a day's worth of dumping, heavy tractors compact the solid wastes evenly, and cover the layer with dirt or other inert solid wastes. In canyon-type landfills, cover materials may come from scraping the walls. The final grade of such landfills is made even with the surrounding topography. In the trench fill method, dump trucks deposit waste in trenches dug out for this purpose. Heavy bulldozers in the trench compact and even the surface. At day's end, the bulldozers use dirt from the excavated material to cover the surface. Heavy front-end loaders, scrapers, and other equipment are used for digging trenches. When this type of landfill is completed, its grade is usually higher than the original grade. Because landfills try to keep the working surface as small as possible, they may not be visible in aerial pictures. Landfills are also synonymous with resource recovery facilities where some of the waste products are separated for recycling or additional treatment. |
|||||
6330 |
Incinerator, composting, or similar facility |
||||
Mainly industrial in character, these facilities may sometimes be co-located with landfills and other solid waste operations. |
|||||
6340 |
Hazardous waste storage facility |
||||
This single category should serve most planning applications. However, communities that have a variety of hazardous waste facilities and want to further delineate such facilities may do so by using the subcategories. But for the rest, this one category should suffice. All emergency preparedness plans require inventory of such facilities, and common applications include local traffic routing rules. |
|||||
6341 |
High-level waste facility |
||||
These facilities handle the most hazardous of all waste products--fission products, which have high-intensity and penetrating radioactivity. The processes involved are heavily mechanized because humans cannot come into contact with these such materials. |
|||||
6342 |
Transuranic waste facility |
||||
These facilities mainly bury the radioactive materials because they decay longer (half-life may be several thousand years) than the fission type. Equipment and structures reflect mining and large-scale industrial operations. |
|||||
6343 |
Spent fuel facility |
||||
Normally these are co-located with nuclear reactor facilities and contain large water pools to store spent fuel. Such fuel is considered high-level waste, but many former nuclear reactor sites still function as spent-fuel facilities until the fuel can be disposed. |
|||||
6344 |
Low-level waste facility |
||||
Such facilities collect, store, and process low-level radiation waste from industrial, commercial, and institutional sources. Their primary operation is to reduce the volume of radioactive material though filtration, evaporation, incineration, and compaction. The transportation and movement of wastes to these facilities are regulated and adequate emergency preparedness includes risks of pollution from such facilities. |
|||||
6350 |
Sewer treatment plant |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6351 |
Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) with anchored components < 50 |
||||
6352 |
WWTP with unanchored components < 50 MGD |
||||
6353 |
WWTP with anchored components 50-200 MGD |
||||
6354 |
WWTP with unanchored components 50-200 MGD |
||||
6355 |
WWTP with anchored components > 200 MGD |
||||
6356 |
WWTP with unanchored components > 200 MGD |
||||
6400 |
Gas or electric power generation facility |
||||
6410 |
Gas storage and distribution facility |
||||
6420 |
Gas compressor stations |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6421 |
Gas compressor stations with anchored components |
||||
6422 |
Gas compressor stations with unanchored components |
||||
6430 |
Power generation plants |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6431 |
Power plants with anchored components < 100 MW |
||||
6432 |
Power plants with unanchored components < 100 MW |
||||
6433 |
Power plants with anchored components > 100 MW |
||||
6434 |
Power plants with unanchored components >100 MW |
||||
6440 |
Electric substation and distribution facility |
||||
Because these structures are of special concern for emergency management and other disaster recovery applications, they appear in a separate category with subcategories useful for emergency planners. Many state and federal emergency management applications (as described in the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency's HAZUS manual) specify these distinctions. |
|||||
6441 |
Low-voltage (115 KV) substation with anchored components |
||||
6442 |
Low-voltage (115 KV) substation with unanchored components |
||||
6443 |
Medium-voltage (230 KV) substation with anchored components |
||||
6444 |
Medium-voltage (230 KV) substation with unanchored components |
||||
6445 |
High-voltage (500 KV) substation with anchored components |
||||
6446 |
High-voltage (500 KV) substation with unanchored components |
||||
6450 |
Geothermal facility |
||||
6460 |
Solar and other forms of energy facility |
||||
Includes windmills, solar panel farms, etc. Windmills are also known by other specialized terms, such as air mill, horizontal air mill, post mill, smock mill, and tower mill. |
|||||
6500 |
Communication towers |
||||
6510 |
Radio, TV, or wireless transmitter |
||||
6520 |
Weather stations or transmitters |
||||
6600 |
Environmental monitoring station (air, soil, etc.) |
||||
6700 |
Sign or billboard |
||||
6900 |
Other miscellaneous structures |
||||
6910 |
Kiosks |
||||
6920 |
Roadside stand, pushcarts, etc. |
||||
Includes movable units that may or may not be permanently anchored. |
|||||
6930 |
Highway rest stops and welcome centers |
||||
6940 |
Playground equipment |
||||
Includes swings, tot-lots, sand lots, and other playground equipment. |
|||||
6950 |
Fountain, sculpture, etc. |
||||
Includes other aesthetic structures and streetscape elements, such as benches, planters, fountains, hydrants, flag pedestals, etc. |
|||||
6970 |
Outdoor stage, bandstand, or similar structure |
||||
Either covered or uncovered, these structures serve as stages for performances in outdoor arenas and gathering places. |
7000 | Specialized military structures | #FFC0CB | ||
These are broad categories for military and defense establishments. It is a complex category that may include other structure types. Local planning applications are only concerned about this at a broad level, but base planners may want to add additional subcategories for some specialized operations, as shown for naval facilities. However, for normal land-use inventories necessary for base planning, apply categories other than "military installation" from this structure-type dimension. In combination with coding from the activity dimension, base planners can filter a variety of land-use characteristics suitable for base planning. |
||||
7100 |
Joint services facility |
|||
7200 |
Air Force facility |
|||
7300 |
Army and marine corps facility |
|||
7400 |
Naval facility |
|||
7410 |
Naval installation |
|||
7420 |
Weapons station |
|||
7430 |
Submarine base |
|||
7450 |
Training center |
|||
7460 |
Communications station |
|||
7470 |
Supply center |
|||
7480 |
Reserve station |
|||
7500 |
Armory building |
|||
Structures enclosing large enclosed space designed for military training. They may have incidental storage and office space within the main structure. |
||||
8000 | Sheds, farm buildings, or agricultural facilities | #228B22 | ||
Use this category for all agricultural structures. For tracking specialized farm and agricultural structures, use the subcategories. This broad category also includes lumber mills, maple sugaring facilities (sugar camp, sugar bush, etc.), agricultural terraces (to hold water and allow infiltration), waterways and stabilized paths (to direct runoff), sediment basins (to hold silt), and fencing (mainly to reduce livestock density). |
||||
8100 |
Grain silos and other storage structure for grains and agricultural products |
|||
8200 |
Livestock facility |
|||
This is a catch-all category for all livestock-related structures that serve horses, cattle, sheep, etc. |
||||
8210 |
Dairy facility |
|||
Includes barns, milking barns, milking parlors, etc. |
||||
8220 |
Poultry facility |
|||
Includes poultry houses for chickens, broilers, layer hens, etc. |
||||
8230 |
Cattle facility |
|||
8240 |
Stables and other equine-related facilities |
|||
Includes horse trot-tracks, and other horse training or veterinary facilities for horses. |
||||
8300 |
Animal feed operations facility |
|||
Although they may be integrated into a livestock facility, some are separately located. |
||||
8310 |
Confined feedlot facility |
|||
Although confined feedlots often refer to feeding operations for hogs, the agriculture industry has had a history of confined feedlot operations for a number of decades. Poultry feedlots, for example, have been confined for many years. Another term that is synonymous but with a different meaning is the US EPA and USDA definition for concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO). This definition refers to feedlots greater than a certain capacity, in this case 1000 animal units. An animal unit is defined as the equivalent of one beef cow. Although definitions vary in zoning and other local regulations, the trend is to have some measurement unit based on impacts of effluent. Using this measure, a CAFO is any facility serving more than 1,000 cattle or 2,500 hogs or 55,000 turkeys, etc. The CAFO definition has other equivalents for other livestock types. If CAFOs have to be measured separate from confined feedlot facilities (i.e., that includes facilities with less than 1,000 animal units), create another subcategory or a special field to keep track of the CAFO units. |
||||
8400 |
Animal waste-handling facility |
|||
8410 |
In ground silos |
|||
Normally they may not be visible, but newer facilities have air vents and other gas recycling equipment co-located. |
||||
8420 |
Waste lagoons |
|||
These are open pits and low-lying areas where animal waste is drained from a feedlot or a confined facility. Although fast disappearing, some of these still do exist and the terms used to describe them vary. |
||||
8430 |
Concrete storage units, covered |
|||
Unlike other types of animal waste-handling facilities, these are more portable. |
||||
8440 |
Concrete storage units, uncovered |
|||
Unlike other types of animal waste-handling facilities, these are more portable. |
||||
8450 |
Composting facility |
|||
When such structures are part of a combined animal-waste handling facilities, use the higher-level Animal waste-handling facility category. |
||||
8500 |
Greenhouses |
|||
Rarely, but, also known as glasshouses, these are enclosed structures with or without climate control facilities for growing plants and vegetation under controlled environments. |
||||
8600 |
Hatcheries |
|||
8700 |
Kennels and other canine-related facilities |
|||
8800 |
Apiary and other related structures |
|||
This is a catch-all category all specialized structures and facilities, such as the following: apiary, which is a bee house or a place where beehives are stored; dovecote, a pigeon or doves house that is usually set above ground; a duckhouse (for ducks), falconry, a facility for housing, training, and breeding birds of prey; etc. |
||||
8900 |
Other farm and farming-related structures |
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Farm-related structures include barns and others, such as: ash house, a farm building to store ash or fertilizers; backhouse, a brewing house attached to a farm or farming structure; bark house, a farm building to store barks of trees; hay barns and chaff houses for storing hay and animal feed; boiling house, a structure where animal feed is prepared; chitting house, a shed to germinate and grow potatoes; laithe, a cow-house with crop storage space; hemmel, a shelter for farm animals with no stalls; etc. |
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9000 | No Structure | #FFFFFF | ||
9100 |
Not applicable to this dimension |
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Use this code as a permanent code for those records that will never be classified in this dimension. It is normal for land-use databases to have records that may never be classified and left blank instead. But LBCS recommends that all records have a code because some computer applications may not be able handle blank entries (null values in database terminology). |
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9200 |
Unclassifiable structure |
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Use this category as a temporary placeholder for activities that cannot be grouped anywhere until the classification scheme is updated. Check the LBCS web site to see how others have dealt with such unique activities before revising the classification scheme. |
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9300 |
Subsurface structures |
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Use this category for activities that occur below the surface that are of no interest to the applications that will use this data set. Assigning one of the unknown categories may be inappropriate. |
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9900 |
To be determined |
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Use this code as a placeholder until an appropriate code can be assigned. It is normal for land-use databases to have records that may never be classified and left blank instead. But LBCS recommends that all records have a code because some computer applications may not be able handle blank entries (null values in database terminology). This code could also be used as the default value for data-entry work. The subcategories serve the same purpose for other coding levels. |
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9990 |
To be determined |