{ "currentVersion": 10.91, "serviceDescription": "Travis County Parks may own and/or manage more parkland that is not open to the public.\n\n Name:May consist of 1 or more polygonal features (\"tracts\") that make up a particular park. To determine how many parks Travis County eithers owns or manages, one could Summarize this field or the ParkID field, which uniquely identifies individual parks.\nPark Tract Name: The Travis_County_Parks feature class consists of polygonal features, \"Tracts\", that make up any particular park. 1 park can consist of 1 or more tracts. LCRA owned parks are divided into land & water tracts.\n Year Open: Year park opened to the public. \"9999\" in this field represents a park/tract that is not open to the public. Null values indicate the year is unknown. The date the land was acquired can be found under the AQUIS_DATE field.\nPark Status: (NRPA field) This field indicates the current physical state of the property.\nOpen\tPark is open to the public, free of charge\nOpen_Fee\tPark is open to the public, day use fee is required\nOpen_Restricted\tPark is open to the public, but access is restricted \u2013 ex by membership, permit or reservation\nClosed\tPark exists but is not open to the public\nDecommissioned\tFormerly a park, turned over to another jurisdiction, generally these properties are still managed as park land\nPlanned\tPark planned for the future\nProposed\tPark land acquired waiting to be planned\nUnknown\tStatus of the property unknown\n\nPark Type: 7 predefined types created & defined by TNR. Based on Service Area (as defined by the NRPA GIS data model), Size, & in 3 cases Purpose. Service Area takes precedence over size.\nNeighborhood Park: \t0-5 miles*/ 10 min*/ 20 - 200 - 100 miles/ 2-6 hrs/ > 1000 acres\nPreserve:\tPurpose = preserve\nConnector:\tPurpose = connector. These tracts make up the individual Greenway/ Corridor Parks. \nNon-Park Flood Mitigation Lands:\tPurpose = flood mitigation lands. None of these should actually be considered a \"park\", as there is never an intention to have these lands open to the public. However, acreage of this type of land should be included in calculations of parkland or land that Travis County Parks owns or manages.\n\t\n\nService Area: Planned Service Area, or the radius from within which a majority of the visitors travel to the site. (See NRPA GIS Data Model Outline for more information)\nManagement Priority: Priority for managing the park resources. See NRPA GIS Data Model Outline for full list of definitions. Below are TNR's adaptation of NRPA's Active & Passive Park Management Priority types.\nActive Park:\tDeveloped & primarily intended for programmed outdoor recreational uses; usually requires capital-intensive investments in site development and/or construction of special recreational facilities.\nPassive Park:\tDeveloped & primarily intended for unprogrammed outdoor recreational uses; usually centered on land & water resources & only requires basic park facilities.\n\nPlanning/ Project Management Areas: Created & defined by TNR. Almost all are tied to river corridors or creek greenways, while all others are grouped into the final category, \"Travis County Other\". In cases where a tract/park falls along both a creek & a river, the creek takes precedence.\nColorado River Corridor: \tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of the Colorado River (East of Longhorn Dam)\nGilleland Creek Greenway:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Gilleland Creek\nLake Austin:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Lake Austin (East of Mansfield Dam & West of Longhorn Dam)\nLake Travis:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Lake Travis (West of Mansfield Dam)\nOnion Creek Greenway:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Onion Creek\nPedernales River Corridor:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of the Pedernales River\nTravis County Other:\tParks that do NOT lay along any river or creek\n\nDevelopment Status: Parks are designated as \"Developed\" if 50% or more of its acreage has been developed.", "mapName": "Layers", "description": "", "copyrightText": "Travis County Transportation & Natural Resources Department", "supportsDynamicLayers": true, "layers": [ { "id": 0, "name": "Travis County Parks", "parentLayerId": -1, "defaultVisibility": true, "subLayerIds": null, "minScale": 3000000, "maxScale": 0, "type": "Feature Layer", "geometryType": "esriGeometryPolygon" } ], "tables": [], "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102739, "latestWkid": 2277 }, "singleFusedMapCache": false, "initialExtent": { "xmin": 3006898.6040029693, "ymin": 1.0055662807536062E7, "xmax": 3315161.8804067597, "ymax": 1.0261171658471923E7, "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102739, "latestWkid": 2277 } }, "fullExtent": { "xmin": 2988791.244895801, "ymin": 1.0023722612876728E7, "xmax": 3194489.3581050485, "ymax": 1.0162928955526471E7, "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102739, "latestWkid": 2277 } }, "minScale": 3000000, "maxScale": 0, "units": "esriFeet", "supportedImageFormatTypes": "PNG32,PNG24,PNG,JPG,DIB,TIFF,EMF,PS,PDF,GIF,SVG,SVGZ,BMP", "documentInfo": { "Title": "", "Author": "", "Comments": "Travis County Parks may own and/or manage more parkland that is not open to the public.\n\n Name:May consist of 1 or more polygonal features (\"tracts\") that make up a particular park. To determine how many parks Travis County eithers owns or manages, one could Summarize this field or the ParkID field, which uniquely identifies individual parks.\nPark Tract Name: The Travis_County_Parks feature class consists of polygonal features, \"Tracts\", that make up any particular park. 1 park can consist of 1 or more tracts. LCRA owned parks are divided into land & water tracts.\n Year Open: Year park opened to the public. \"9999\" in this field represents a park/tract that is not open to the public. Null values indicate the year is unknown. The date the land was acquired can be found under the AQUIS_DATE field.\nPark Status: (NRPA field) This field indicates the current physical state of the property.\nOpen\tPark is open to the public, free of charge\nOpen_Fee\tPark is open to the public, day use fee is required\nOpen_Restricted\tPark is open to the public, but access is restricted \u2013 ex by membership, permit or reservation\nClosed\tPark exists but is not open to the public\nDecommissioned\tFormerly a park, turned over to another jurisdiction, generally these properties are still managed as park land\nPlanned\tPark planned for the future\nProposed\tPark land acquired waiting to be planned\nUnknown\tStatus of the property unknown\n\nPark Type: 7 predefined types created & defined by TNR. Based on Service Area (as defined by the NRPA GIS data model), Size, & in 3 cases Purpose. Service Area takes precedence over size.\nNeighborhood Park: \t0-5 miles*/ 10 min*/ 20 - 200 - 100 miles/ 2-6 hrs/ > 1000 acres\nPreserve:\tPurpose = preserve\nConnector:\tPurpose = connector. These tracts make up the individual Greenway/ Corridor Parks. \nNon-Park Flood Mitigation Lands:\tPurpose = flood mitigation lands. None of these should actually be considered a \"park\", as there is never an intention to have these lands open to the public. However, acreage of this type of land should be included in calculations of parkland or land that Travis County Parks owns or manages.\n\t\n\nService Area: Planned Service Area, or the radius from within which a majority of the visitors travel to the site. (See NRPA GIS Data Model Outline for more information)\nManagement Priority: Priority for managing the park resources. See NRPA GIS Data Model Outline for full list of definitions. Below are TNR's adaptation of NRPA's Active & Passive Park Management Priority types.\nActive Park:\tDeveloped & primarily intended for programmed outdoor recreational uses; usually requires capital-intensive investments in site development and/or construction of special recreational facilities.\nPassive Park:\tDeveloped & primarily intended for unprogrammed outdoor recreational uses; usually centered on land & water resources & only requires basic park facilities.\n\nPlanning/ Project Management Areas: Created & defined by TNR. Almost all are tied to river corridors or creek greenways, while all others are grouped into the final category, \"Travis County Other\". In cases where a tract/park falls along both a creek & a river, the creek takes precedence.\nColorado River Corridor: \tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of the Colorado River (East of Longhorn Dam)\nGilleland Creek Greenway:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Gilleland Creek\nLake Austin:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Lake Austin (East of Mansfield Dam & West of Longhorn Dam)\nLake Travis:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Lake Travis (West of Mansfield Dam)\nOnion Creek Greenway:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of Onion Creek\nPedernales River Corridor:\tParks lying along or w/in the vicinity of the Pedernales River\nTravis County Other:\tParks that do NOT lay along any river or creek\n\nDevelopment Status: Parks are designated as \"Developed\" if 50% or more of its acreage has been developed.", "Subject": "Travis County Parks", "Category": "", "AntialiasingMode": "None", "TextAntialiasingMode": "Force", "Keywords": "travis county,parks,recreation" }, "capabilities": "Map,Query,Data", "supportedQueryFormats": "JSON, geoJSON", "exportTilesAllowed": false, "referenceScale": 0, "supportsDatumTransformation": true, "maxRecordCount": 1000, "maxImageHeight": 4096, "maxImageWidth": 4096, "supportedExtensions": "KmlServer", "serviceItemId": "9cf0327c36a2409abfdb190641b33baf" }