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Community Civic Addressing - Guide to Best Practices v. 4.0

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Figure 1 Simple Addressing Starting with Low Numbers Figure 2 Simple Addressing with Cross-Street Preface Numbering 2 4 6 8 10 12 1 3 5 7 9 11 14 16 18 20 22 24 13 15 17 19 21 23 14 16 18 20 22 24 2 4 6 8 10 12 Pine Avenue Pine Avenue Blue Drive Fiord Street Norway Drive 9811 9809 9807 9805 9803 9801 9711 9709 9707 9705 9703 9701 9712 9710 9708 9706 9704 9702 9812 9810 9808 9806 9804 9802 112 Avenue 112 Avenue 99 Street 98 Street 97 Street 3 Civic Address Assignment Mapping editors should follow local and provincial authorities when assigning address numbers. We present the following three procedures for assigning address points to sites and landmarks. 3.1 Assigning Address Numbers Addressing authorities typically assign the lowest number in a range of address numbers at the beginning (i.e., the From-point) of a road and continue until the end (i.e., the To-point) of the road (see Figure 1). As part of the address number, authorities may indicate the cross-street's number when these streets are numbered instead of being named, as shown in Figure 2. In these cases, cross-street numbers give a rough location of the address; they help to reinforce that address numbers are in a non-random pattern. Community Civic Addressing Guide to Best Practices v4.0 3

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