Odd numbers have the digits 1, 3, 5, 7 or 9 in their ones place. Khatian number is the serial number of the record of the land in the BLRO register. Rural land holdings are identified by Khatian number on the parcha alloted when land is mutated with BLRO.
Plot number is the number alloted to the plot of land when it is mutated in municipal records. The U. Postal Service has a standard numbering system: even numbers on the north and west sides of the streets and odd numbers on the east and south sides of streets.
It refers to the city block with that range of addresses. For example, the block of x street is the block with addresses from to Each block is given a range of addresses allowed for houses on that block. This is usually done in multiples of If a house number is provided, it is written on the same line as the street name; a house name is written on the previous line. When addresses are written inline, line breaks are replaced by commas. Conventions on the placing of house numbers differ: either before or after the street name.
The odd numbers are usually on the left side of the road, looking in the direction in which the numbers increase; though in some cities including Saint Petersburg the odd numbers are on the right side.
After the revision, two streets were set up as basing points, Division Street running north and south, and Center Street running east and west. Now, all of the streets have a prefix designating north, east, south or west. At the point where Center and Division Streets intersect, and house numbers increase in size, the further the distance from these intersecting points. The streets are laid out in gridiron fashion. Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin , recently revised its street naming system: on the east side-of the bay, which is the larger area, all north-south streets were assigned numerical names, beginning with "First Avenue," and the east-west streets were given geographical names mostly states , beginning with "Alabama Street" and proceeding geographically to "Utah Street.
Oshkosh, Wisconsin , prepared a new address system in which specified that all north-south streets should be called "Street," all east-west streets should be called "Avenue," all diagonal streets should be called "Drives," and all unrelated dead-end streets should be called "Courts. Henderson, Tennessee , adopted a new property numbering system in in which a grid was used and where there was a bend in the street, the numbering was continued as though the street was straight.
An ordinance to provide for a uniform system of numbering in Jefferson City, Tennessee was published in Community Planning in Tennessee , a report of the Tennessee State Planning Commission. The street-naming system of the metropolitan area of a city should be linked to the central city.
A good example of a coordinated street naming pattern is in the vicinity of Washington, D. The northeast Maryland suburbs falling within the area of the Maryland National Capital Park and Planning Commission adopted a street naming system in , which is primarily a continuation of the street naming system of Washington, D. These streets radiate north and east from the U. Capitol, and form the two inner boundaries of that city's northeast section. East from North Capitol are a series of numbered north-south streets which continue beyond the Washington, D.
North of East Capitol Street, the system consists of several zones of east-west streets arranged in alphabetical order. Monroe County, New York , at the request of the smaller municipalities within its area, undertook the job of eliminating duplication of street and road names, and of establishing a pattern of house numbering. Over two hundred duplicate names were discovered and eliminated. The new pattern was dovetailed into that previously established for Rochester, where numbers were formerly established on the basis of 15 feet per number.
This was extended through the towns surrounding the central city, until all old subdivisions with lot frontages of less than 50 feet had been included. In the area of new subdivisions, where 50 foot lots have been required, the numbers were based on 50 feet intervals. Arterial highways originating in Rochester were given the same name for their entire length to the county line, and were given numbers on a continuous basis, the lower numbers nearer to the center of the town.
Where incorporated villages had adopted another numbering system, the county numbering system was established so that the incorporated villages could join the county system when they chose to do so.
This system utilizes a grid, with base line streets dividing the city into east, west, north and south portions. Streets are given numbers, instead of street names, with an increase in the size of the numbers, the greater the distance from the base lines.
Curved and crooked streets, and other streets deviating from the basic grid pattern may fit into this pattern of street numbering. For example, in the illustration used below, which appeared in the American City in the issue of September , an irregular street will have as many "number" names as necessary.
In the first example, the diagonal street from point A to point B, is considered as an east-west street and is called North Street at one end, and North Street at the other since the street originates on the even numbered side on one block and runs through to the odd numbered side on the other end of the block, the numbers differ accordingly.
The residents would choose as a street address whatever street name was closest to their home. If this street were to be continued in a diagonal direction, it would have a new numbered name at each intersection, corresponding to its geographic location.
In the second example, a street running from points C to D to E would be in part an east-west street, and in part, a north-south street, and would be numbered accordingly. In rural communities, it is suggested that numbers be based on fractions of a mile, indicating the distance not only from the point of origin of the road, but also from other properties along that road. In a system described in the New York State Planning News of June 8, , it is proposed that the house numbers indicate the hundredths of a mile the property is located from the origin of the road.
This system is geared to the automobile and the speedometer, since a motorist may locate a property by watching his mileage gauge. The numbers begin at the end of the road nearest the city, village, or post office, or where the road joins a more important highway. There would be a hundred units to each mile or about 53 feet to a unit.
Since odd numbers are used on one side of the road, and even on the other, there should actually be numbers running from 1— for the first mile. The way the system is reported in the article, only numbers 1— are applicable for the first mile, evidently assuming that the area will not be so built up to require use of all the numbers. This is the system that has been adopted by Fresno County, California.
A base point was established in the City of Fresno, which is located approximately in the center of the county, and north-south, and east-west lines established, with one mile square sections marked off in grid fashion.
In an example given, an address West Rural Road could be located by consulting a directory for the location of the Rural Road, and the property would be located a little more than 6. An example of street naming and house numbering in a modern subdivision with a curvilinear street pattern is that of Park Forest, Illinois.
In Park Forest, the new community development south of Chicago, one of the designation problems involved making a decision as to which of two streets to use in giving the unit an address. The buildings — row houses — are grouped around parking bays, and the units actually face neither street.
The sketch shows how this and some of the other numbering problems were handled. Professor Eugene Van Cleef has described a system of house numbering on irregular streets, within a larger framework of a gridiron street pattern, in the February, issue of American City.
A house derives its street address from its location in respect to the two nearest major arteries. In the case of Hagerty v. Chicago , N. Under the Laws of , the common council of cities, and the president and board of trustees in villages are expressly authorized to name and change the name of any street, avenue, alley, or other public place.
The property owner abutting the street was found to have no property right in the name of the street which would prevent the municipality from changing the name of the street.
According to Bacon v. Miller , N. The court also found that although renaming and renumbering streets is inherently a local matter, it cannot be done arbitrarily, but must be done in good faith.
In Ohio, the court held that in Miller v. Cincinnati , 10 Ohio Dec. Law Bul. In Brown v. Topeka 74 P. However, when streets are deeded to a city or village, the deed conveying the street may restrict the grantee's right to change its name according to Belden v. Niagara Falls , Misc. Naming streets is a legislative act and not a judicial act, according to Darling v. Jersey City , 78 A. The center of town is the point of origin from where the hundred blocks are measured.
The hundred blocks provide how far north, south, east or west you are from the center of town. An address is created up of a street and hundred blocks. Lot number. Definition: The number given to a property for subdivision administration purposes prior to road numbering. Table of Contents.
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