"In the First Historic District" - watercolor by Margaret Wirtenberg.
CTDOT ADT numbers on a map of Weston, for the intersection where the building shown (above left is at the northeast corner, in the first historic district in town), can be found here.  Domiski-Oakrock map of sub-watershed boundaries at right (larger version available by clicking on this map--please note that you must rotate the larger version to have north pointing up)!  SWRPA map showing the Saugatuck River watershed.  And newly reassessed Weston Tax Maps can be found here.


WESTON, CONNECTICUT
UNOFFICIAL Town Plan data maps used by "About Town" below - click on "WESTON, CONNECTICUT" for U.S. Census Tract map.
Central part of town - "the hub"
Proposal for resubdividing interior space in building one (hardware store) in May 2010.
How about a "Village District" in the hub?  A map was given to P&Z from this
website...its proposal shows it
here.  FORUM report here.
Soils survey maps from the U.S.D.A.  Soil Conservation Service, 1981:  details for School Road and Bisceglie, as examples.
North (above Godfrey)

East (Saugatuck River Valley)

Ring (encircling the hub)



ROADS

Map of roads above from the U.S. Census website


RIGHTS OF WAY


"RIGHTS OF WAY" INCLUDES BOTH  PAVED AND UNPAVED PORTIONS:  Here is a link to a highway solution that looks more "rural" than rip-rap.



CENSUS TRACT GEOGRAPHY

Map above from the South Western Regional Planning Agency along with block group data.




LAND COVER

The eight town region of "SWRPA" showing relative land cover and general land use, map from Regional Housing Study.




DEVELOPED AREAS 1996

DEVELOPED AREAS IN WESTON, CONNECTICUT @1996
Legend:  development by lot, non-residential uses in textured patterns;  non-conforming lots (i.e. less than two acres in size) in red.
NOT AN OFFICIAL MAP - this map was created in 1996 using an Aspetuck Land Trust basemap from 1992, applying information shown on Town Tax Maps from 1981 to locate non-conforming lots.   As years went by, tax maps became more accurate as land became more valuable and reassessments, by law, became more frequent.  We note that there are several non-conforming lots we know of that do not appear here.



Read about SWRPA WATERSHED STUDY here.