Wexford County Development Plan 2022 - 2028

Arna fhoilsiú ag: Wexford County Council
Téama: Housing
Tuairimí: 1382
Rátáil oscailteachta:

Geospatial layers from Wexford County Council Development Plan 2022 - 2028 projected in ITM

  • Settlement Plan Zoning
  • Rural Area Types
  • Geological Sites
  • Battlefields
  • Coastal Zones
  • Record of Protected Structures (RPS)
  • Architectural Conservation Areas (ACAs)
  • Landscape Character Assessment (LCA)
  • Wind Energy Strategy
  • Solar Energy Strategy
  • Pearl & Mussel Areas
  • Ramsar Sites
  • Protected Shellfish Areas
  • Special Protection Areas
  • Natural Heritage Areas
  • Special Areas of Conservation.
  • Flood Zones A & B.

Disclaimers:

Coastal Zones/Wind Energy Strategy/Solar Energy Strategy/LCA:

Where discrepancies exist between the digital copy and the pdf copy the pdf copy represents the adopted plan and will take precedence.

Record of Protected Structures:

The adopted Record of Protected Structures is included in Volume 5 of the County Development Plan 2022-2028. In the event of a discrepancy occurring between the digital version and Volume 5, Volume 5 will take precedence.

Flood Zoning:

This flood zone mapping was prepared as part of the Strategic Flood Risk Assessment (SFRA) of the Wexford County Development Plan 2022-2028 to inform a broad flood risk assessment of the county. Please refer to Volume 11 Strategic Flood Risk Assessment for further details. The flood mapping is made up of individual flood mapping datasets, and each dataset has different levels of confidence. To this end, this flood mapping should not be relied upon at individual site or property level. Where discrepancies exist between the digital copy and the pdf copy the pdf copy represents the adopted plan and will take precedence.

As advised in the County Development Plan, flood hazard and flood risk information is an emerging dataset of information and the flood maps used by Wexford County Council may be altered in light of future data and analysis. Wexford County Council will screen for flood risk based on the flood maps that form part of the Strategic Flood Risk Assessment and any future updated versions of these maps or any other future flood maps or risk assessment information provided by the Office of Public Works, or other consultants engaged by the Council for that purpose.

In this regard, some components used in the SFRA flood mapping have been superceded by the publication of the National Indicative Fluvial Mapping (NIFM) and the National Coastal Flood Hazard Mapping (NCFHM). These datasets are available to view on https://www.floodinfo.ie/map/floodmaps/. However, they do not supercede the SFRA mapping in all locations. Users are therefore advised to contact the Planning Department, Wexford County Council to obtain information on the most up to date flood maps relating to a particular area and for user guidance notes applicable to the use of that mapping.

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Resource: Heritage Areas

URL https://services-eu1.arcgis.com/SEIHigRppeVyVssQ/arcgis/rest/services/Heritage_Areas/FeatureServer

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Additional Information

Field Value
Data last updated 28 Meán Fómhair 2023
Metadata last updated 28 Meán Fómhair 2023
Created 28 Meán Fómhair 2023
Formáid esri rest service
Ceadúna Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Ide4509703-0d71-4bdd-a113-b274b7afaa95
NotesContains Special Protected Areas, Special Areas of Conservation, Natural Heritage Areas, Ramsar, Pearl & Mussel Areas. The EU Birds Directive (79/409/EEC) requires designation of SPAs for: Listed rare and vulnerable species; Regularly occurring migratory species, such as ducks, geese and waders; Wetlands, especially those of international importance, which attract large numbers of migratory birds each year. (Internationally important means that 1% of the population of a species uses the site, or more than 20,000 birds regularly use the site.) SPAs have been designated since 1985. 25 other sites enjoy legal protection and will shortly by designated as SPAs. However, further designations are required pursuant to the Birds Directive. The Minister will be publishing his proposals for the designation of additional sites on an on-going basis in Autumn 2007 and Spring 2008. It should be noted that many existing and future SPAs overlap with SACs. The Irish SPAs join a total of around 3,000 sites across the European Union. The basic designation for wildlife is the Natural Heritage Area (NHA). This is an area considered important for the habitats present or which holds species of plants and animals whose habitat needs protection. To date, 75 raised bogs have been given legal protection, covering some 23,000 hectares. These raised bogs are located mainly in the midlands. A further 73 blanket bogs, covering 37,000ha, mostly in western areas are also designated as NHAs. Special Area of Conservation are prime wildlife conservation areas in the country, considered to be important on a European as well as Irish level. Most Special Areas of Conservation (SACs) are in the countryside, although a few sites reach into town or city landscapes, such as Dublin Bay and Cork Harbour. Conservation management plans are available for many SACs. The legal basis on which SACs are selected and designated is the EU Habitats Directive, transposed into Irish law in the as amended in 1998 and 2005. The Directive lists certain habitats and species that must be protected within SACs. Irish habitats include raised bogs, blanket bogs, turloughs, sand dunes, machair (flat sandy plains on the north and west coasts), heaths, lakes, rivers, woodlands, estuaries and sea inlets. The 25 Irish species which must be afforded protection include Salmon, Otter, Freshwater Pearl Mussel, Bottlenose Dolphin and Killarney Fern. The areas chosen as SAC in Ireland cover an area of approximately 13,500 sq. km. Roughly 53% is land, the remainder being marine or large lakes. Across the EU, over 12,600 sites have been identified and proposed, covering 420,000 sq. km of land and sea, an area the size of Germany. Copyright Government of Ireland. This dataset was created by National Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage. This copyright material is licensed for re-use under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Package idaa9e5004-e491-4cb3-beca-b3d15797a10d
Position21
Stateactive
Cur síos Contains Special Protected Areas, Special Areas of Conservation, Natural Heritage Areas, Ramsar, Pearl & Mussel Areas. The EU Birds Directive (79/409/EEC) requires designation of SPAs for: Listed rare and vulnerable species; Regularly occurring migratory species, such as ducks, geese and waders; Wetlands, especially those of international importance, which attract large numbers of migratory birds each year. (Internationally important means that 1% of the population of a species uses the site, or more than 20,000 birds regularly use the site.) SPAs have been designated since 1985. 25 other sites enjoy legal protection and will shortly by designated as SPAs. However, further designations are required pursuant to the Birds Directive. The Minister will be publishing his proposals for the designation of additional sites on an on-going basis in Autumn 2007 and Spring 2008. It should be noted that many existing and future SPAs overlap with SACs. The Irish SPAs join a total of around 3,000 sites across the European Union. The basic designation for wildlife is the Natural Heritage Area (NHA). This is an area considered important for the habitats present or which holds species of plants and animals whose habitat needs protection. To date, 75 raised bogs have been given legal protection, covering some 23,000 hectares. These raised bogs are located mainly in the midlands. A further 73 blanket bogs, covering 37,000ha, mostly in western areas are also designated as NHAs. Special Area of Conservation are prime wildlife conservation areas in the country, considered to be important on a European as well as Irish level. Most Special Areas of Conservation (SACs) are in the countryside, although a few sites reach into town or city landscapes, such as Dublin Bay and Cork Harbour. Conservation management plans are available for many SACs. The legal basis on which SACs are selected and designated is the EU Habitats Directive, transposed into Irish law in the as amended in 1998 and 2005. The Directive lists certain habitats and species that must be protected within SACs. Irish habitats include raised bogs, blanket bogs, turloughs, sand dunes, machair (flat sandy plains on the north and west coasts), heaths, lakes, rivers, woodlands, estuaries and sea inlets. The 25 Irish species which must be afforded protection include Salmon, Otter, Freshwater Pearl Mussel, Bottlenose Dolphin and Killarney Fern. The areas chosen as SAC in Ireland cover an area of approximately 13,500 sq. km. Roughly 53% is land, the remainder being marine or large lakes. Across the EU, over 12,600 sites have been identified and proposed, covering 420,000 sq. km of land and sea, an area the size of Germany. Copyright Government of Ireland. This dataset was created by National Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage. This copyright material is licensed for re-use under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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