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Determining if road is privately owned or not in USA

Geographic Information Systems Asked by boulder_ruby on June 26, 2021

I’m working on a project where it matters greatly whether or not a piece of land is on a private road.

Google Maps in many cases takes private roads (for example in master-planned subdivisions) and treats them in the same way it does for public roads.

Is there any quick way to check whether a road is privately owned or public?

In a lot of cases, even if a road is public it can be privately owned.

One Answer

To answer this another question ("How to identify front of land lot?"), we need also to separate "property boundary" of land lot from public boundary of lanes, sidewalks and other public parcels of a city block.

There are another concept, between "privately owned" and "public" (not privately owned): the condominium, where the lanes, sidewalks, gardens, etc. are a commonhold of many land lot owners, tipically at the same city block. Some areas of some city blocks have condominium characteristics, because are shared areas.

The city block illustration bellow show a case: a lane (light gray) in the block, that is not a "public" street (dark gray), but an access medium (like an alley) for land lot owners.

city block illustration

Translating this concepts to GIS:

  • There are many layers with this information: streets, lots (land-lots), blocks (city blocks), and others.

  • Some cadastral data have this information: the main source for Google Maps is the OpenStreetMap where (check its Wiki), many cadastral information (as low/high traffic) is provided. Many oficial data (from city municipalities) have list of names of public streets.


So, "how do I determine if a road is privately owned or not?", and not only at USA:

  1. Use all informations. Start with the "oficial" or the "consensual" ones. Example: big (high traffic) roads, big streets, etc. that are always public, and oficial data (law) that express what are public.

  2. Use parcels (blocks and lots) as reference about "inside/internal street": all that is internal of parcel polygon and is not at item-1, is suspected to be not public.
    Example: a very low traffic alley, with no name, short length (block length), is a good candidate to non-public. An alley internal to a non-public land lot, in general (check USA/state/city rules), is a non-public street.
    Important: all "streets" into parcels stated (oficial information) as "closed horizontal condominium", are non-public.

  3. Refine and check information again.

Correct answer by Peter Krauss on June 26, 2021

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