Dictionary Definition
plat n : a map showing planned or actual features
of an area (streets and building lots etc.) v : make a plat of;
"Plat the town" [syn: plot]
[also: platting,
platted]platted See
plat
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
platted- present participle of plat
Extensive Definition
A plat consists of a map, drawn to scale, showing the
divisions of a piece of land. U.S.
General
Land Office surveyors drew township plats to show the distance
and bearing between survey corners, and sometimes included
topographic or vegetation information. City, town or village plats
show subdivisions into blocks with
streets and alleys. Further refinement often
splits blocks into individual lots,
usually for the purpose of selling the described lots; this has
become known as subdivision.
After the filing of a plat, legal descriptions can refer to block
and lot-numbers rather than portions of sections.
In order for plats to become legally valid, a
local governing body, such as a public works
department, urban
planning commission, or zoning board must normally review
and approve them.
Types of plats
A Plat of Consolidation originates when a landowner takes over several adjacent parcels of land and consolidates them into a single parcel. In order to do this, the landowner will usually need to make a survey of the parcels and submit the survey to the governing body that would have to approve the consolidation.A Plat of Subdivision appears when a landowner or
municipality divides land into smaller parcels. If a landowner owns
an acre of land, for
instance, and wants to divide it into three pieces, a surveyor
would have to take precise measurements of the land and submit the
survey to the governing body, which would then have to approve
it.
A Correction Plat or Amending Plat records minor
corrections to an existing plat, such as correcting a surveying mistake or a
scrivener's error.
Such plats can sometimes serve to relocate lot-lines or other
features, but laws usually tightly restrict such use.
A Vacating Plat functions to legally void a prior
plat or portion of a plat. The rules normally allow such plats only
when all the platted lots remain unsold and no construction of
buildings or public improvements has taken place.
Other names associated with Parcel Maps are: Land
Maps, Tax Maps, Real Estate Maps, Landowner Maps, Lot and Block
Survey System and Land Survey Maps. Parcel maps, unlike any other
public real estate record, have no federal, state or municipal
oversight with their development.
Reasons for platting
- Designation of roads or other rights of way.
- Ensuring that all property has access to a public right of way. Without such access, a property owner may be unable to utilize his or her property without having to trespass to reach it. The platting process restricts the fraudulent practice of knowingly selling lots with no access to public right of way.
- Creation or vacation of easements.
- Ensuring compliance with zoning. Zoning regulations frequently contain restrictions that govern lot sizes and lot geometry. The platting process allows the governing authorities to ensure that all lots comply with these regulations.
- Ensuring compliance with a land use plan established to control the development of a city.
- Ensuring that all property has access to public utilities.
Reading a Plat
Plats contain a number of informational elements:
- The property boundaries are indicated by bearing and distance. The bearing is in the format of degrees, minutes, seconds with compass point letters before and afterward to indicate the compass quadrant. For example N 38 00 00 E is 38 degrees into the northeast quadrant or 38 degrees east of north. Similarly S 22 00 00 W is 22 degrees west of south. Note that north here is true north, so magnetic orientation must be corrected for magnetic declination. (Explanatory graphic)
- The certification note provides information on the surveyor and is the location where recent US plats place the flood survey code in accordance with the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968.
- The north arrow is familiar to most map readers
- The title block and lot numbers provide information specific to a development or land use plan
- An easement is usually indicated by a dashed line, although it is also common to have to look them up in supplementary documents (such as a title report)
- Streets are usually indicated by a graphical outline of the right of way, and sometimes depicts the paved area.
History
The word "plat" in medieval English (and ever
since) refers to a piece (or "plot") of land.
The creation of a plat map marks an important
step in the process of
incorporating a town or
city according to United
States law. Because the process of incorporation must occur at
a courthouse, the
incorporation papers for many American cities may be stored
hundreds of miles away in another
state.
For example, to view the original plat for the
city of San
Francisco, California, filed in 1849, one must visit the
Clackamas
County courthouse in Oregon
City, Oregon, then the capital of the Oregon
Territory and the site of the closest federal land office. This
happened because California did
not gain statehood
until 1850.
See also
External links
platted in German: Flurkarte
platted in Hungarian: Földmérési
alaptérkép