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Notable_Trees (FeatureServer)

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Service Description: Point dataset of individual or groups of trees identified as Notable Trees (SCHED 6) for the Independent Hearings Panel (IHP) recommended District Plan for Wellington City Council.

Service ItemId: 51b98702642241439e82f37702fa0ab7

Has Versioned Data: false

Max Record Count: 2000

Supported query Formats: JSON

Supports applyEdits with GlobalIds: False

Supports Shared Templates: True

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Layers:

Description:
Intended Purpose:
A point layer identifies individuals and groups of trees within the city which have ecological, amenity, or heritage value for the IHP recommended version of the Wellington City Council Proposed District Plan as part of the District Plan Review Process. 

Abbreviations/Acronyms:
PDP – Proposed District Plan
IHP - Independent Hearings Panel
WCC – Wellington City Council 

Refresh Rate (Data only):
Static

Ownership:
This data is owned by WCC District Planning Team, contact District.Plan@wcc.govt.nz for questions about this layer and its appropriate use cases. 

Stewardship:
This data is maintained by WCC City Insights Team, contact cityinsightsgis@wcc.govt.nz for information about the creation of this layer and its maintenance. 

Custodianship:
This data is stored on WCC's ArcGIS Online environment, administered by the Corporate GIS Team. 

Authoritative Data Sources (Data only):
Specific control data is prepared based on recommendations provided by the IHP in their decision report.

Summary of Data Collection (Data only):
Within Wellington City, individual and groups of trees are identified and protected for their significant historic heritage, ecological or amenity values. These trees may be notable as prominent natural features and landmarks, contributors to local identity, spectacular or rare specimens, or associated with special sites, events or people. It is important that these trees are identified, protected and cared for so that they can be enjoyed by future generations.

Notable trees can be either indigenous or exotic species and located on either public land (such as road reserves or parks) or on private property. For a tree to be notable it must be evaluated against the ‘Standard Tree Evaluation Method’ (STEM) and score 110 points or higher or have significant cultural and historical value, taking into account potential STEM scores.

Notable trees are different to urban allotment trees which are trees that are part of significant natural areas (SNAs) in urban neighbourhoods.


Copyright Text: District Planning Team, Wellington City Council

Spatial Reference: 2193 (2193)

Initial Extent:
Full Extent:
Units: esriMeters

Child Resources:   Info   SharedTemplates

Supported Operations:   Query   ConvertFormat   Get Estimates