{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "", "guid": "", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "Assessor Appraisal Neighborhoods - The Clark County Assessor's office has divided Clark County into analysis areas that they refer to as \u201cneighborhoods\u201d even though they do not represent official neighborhood associations in any way. The Assessor's Office defines their "neighborhood" analysis areas as geographically common market areas where social, environmental, economic, and governmental forces affecting market value are shared. The boundaries of these "neighborhood" analysis areas follow natural, man-made, or political boundaries and are established by a commonality based on land uses, types and age of buildings, population, or similar factors.Assessor Appraisal Neighborhoods contains over 400 of these analysis areas across Clark County. Each analysis area contains an identifying \u201cneighborhood\u201d number and a general land use description. This allows the Assessor staff to quickly visualize \u201cneighborhood\u201d designations at the property level. These \u201cneighborhoods\u201d are used by the Assessor staff in their workflows for appraising property values for taxing purposes.Please note that there are other types of Assessor \u201cneighborhoods\u201d that are more specific to what is being appraised:Commercial Assessor NeighborhoodsCondominium Assessor NeighborhoodsIndustrial Assessor NeighborhoodsMulti-family Assessor NeighborhoodsResidential acreage Assessor NeighborhoodsResidential subdivision Assessor NeighborhoodsEach of these Assessor \u201cneighborhood\u201d types are maintained as individual GIS layers with their own metadata record with more information.", "description": "For complete metadata details see: https://gis.clark.wa.gov/gishome/Metadata/#/layer/6802", "summary": "Assessor Appraisal Neighborhoods - The Clark County Assessor's office has divided Clark County into analysis areas that they refer to as \u201cneighborhoods\u201d even though they do not represent official neighborhood associations in any way. The Assessor's Office defines their "neighborhood" analysis areas as geographically common market areas where social, environmental, economic, and governmental forces affecting market value are shared. The boundaries of these "neighborhood" analysis areas follow natural, man-made, or political boundaries and are established by a commonality based on land uses, types and age of buildings, population, or similar factors.Assessor Appraisal Neighborhoods contains over 400 of these analysis areas across Clark County. Each analysis area contains an identifying \u201cneighborhood\u201d number and a general land use description. This allows the Assessor staff to quickly visualize \u201cneighborhood\u201d designations at the property level. These \u201cneighborhoods\u201d are used by the Assessor staff in their workflows for appraising property values for taxing purposes.Please note that there are other types of Assessor \u201cneighborhoods\u201d that are more specific to what is being appraised:Commercial Assessor NeighborhoodsCondominium Assessor NeighborhoodsIndustrial Assessor NeighborhoodsMulti-family Assessor NeighborhoodsResidential acreage Assessor NeighborhoodsResidential subdivision Assessor NeighborhoodsEach of these Assessor \u201cneighborhood\u201d types are maintained as individual GIS layers with their own metadata record with more information.", "title": "Assessor Appraisal Neighborhoods", "tags": [ "Taxlots2 tax lots parcelsr taxlots parcels" ], "type": "", "typeKeywords": [], "thumbnail": "", "url": "", "minScale": "NaN", "maxScale": "NaN", "spatialReference": "", "accessInformation": "Clark County Assessor", "licenseInfo": "Clark County does not warrant the accuracy, reliability, or timeliness of any information in this system, and shall not be held liable for losses caused by using this information. Portions of this information may not be current or accurate.", "portalUrl": "" }