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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPROPERTY IDENTIFICATION• Property Card Page 1 of 1 Michelle Franklin, CFA -- Saint Lucie County Property Appraiser -- All rights reserved. Property Identification Site Address: TBD Parcel ID: 1407-313-0015- Account #: 6265 Sec/Town/Range: 000-1 07/34S/40E Map ID: 14/07S Zoning: AR-1 Use Type: 0000 Jurisdiction: Saint Lucie I Ownership Tristen Trefelner Alexis Trefelner 422 Dusk WAY Fort Pierce, FL 34945 Current Values Just/Market: $26,700 Assessed Exemptions: $0 Taxable: Date 09-27-2018 01-30-2009 01-30-2009 View: Year Built: N/A Primary Wall: Bedrooms: 0 Full Baths: 0 Half Baths: 0 County Legal Description 7 34 40 N 1/2 OF NW 1/4 OF SW 1/4 OF NE 1/4 OF SW 1/4-LESS W 60 FT- (1.04 AC) Historical Values 3-year ���� �O $23,540 Year Just/Market Assessed Exemptions Taxable $23,540 2018 $26,700 $23,540 $0 $23,540 2017 $21,400 $21,400 $0 $21,400 2016 $21,900 $21,900 $0 $21,900 Sale History Book/Page Sale Code Deed Grantor 4185 / 1931 0001 WD Presutti Jr Victor 3056 / 2946 0001 SP JPL Properties Inc 3056 / 2945 0111 QC Little III John P Primary Building Information Finished Area of this building: 0 SF Gross Area of this building: 0 SF Exterior Data Type Roof Cover: Roof Structure: Frame: Grade: Story Height: No. Units: 0 Interior Data A/C %: 0% Electric: Heated %: N/A% Heat Type: Sprinkled %: 0% Heat Fuel: Total Areas Price $40,000 $32,500 $100 Building Type: Effective Year: 2014 Secondary Wall: Primary Int Wall: Avg Hgt/Floor: 0 Primary Floors: Finished/Under Air 0 (SF): Gross Area (SF): 0 Land Size (acres): 1.04 Land Size (SF): 45,302 Total Building Count: I Special Features and Yard Items Qty Units Year Blt This information is believed to be correct at this time but it is subject to change and is not warranted. © Copyright 2018 Saint Lucie County Property Appraiser. All rights reserved. ittps://www.paslc.org/RECard/ 10/24/2018 x 6Y' 3q MMIR Wl r- 1 x 1414fv All .,'� &,'�'�2':�" '� � �90 "`�.:il �7'�ar a�tuYaNYili:t5l� ,• 'r p"+3 •�•-Fi' 77, MAP LEGEND Area of Interest (AOI) Area of Interest (AOI) Soils Soil Map Unit Polygons f• s Soil Map Unit Lines 0 Soil Map Unit Points Special Point Features #0 Blowout Borrow Pit Clay Spot Closed Depression Gravel Pit Gravelly Spot ;_4 Landfill i Lava Flow � Marsh or swamp Mine or Quarry Miscellaneous Water (D Perennial Water Rock Outcrop = + Saline Spot Sandy Spot 4=a. Severely Eroded Spot f Sinkhole Slide or Slip 0o Sodic Spot Custom Soil Resource Report MAP INFORMATION Spoil Area The soil surveys that comprise your AOI were mapped at M Stony Spot 1:24,000. }Ar Very Stony Spot Warning: Soil Map may not be valid at this scale. Wet Spot. ;. Other Enlargement of maps beyond the scale of mapping can cause misunderstandingof the detail of mapping Aping and accuracy of soil .- Special Line Features line placement. The maps do not show the small areas of Water Features contrasting soils that could have been shown at a more detailed scale. Streams and Canals Transportation Please rely on the bar scale on each map sheet for map Rails measurements. � Interstate Highways Source of Map: Natural Resources Conservation Service _�. US Routes Web Soil Survey URL: Major Roads Coordinate System: Web Mercator (EPSG:3857) Local Roads Maps from the Web Soil Survey are based on the Web Mercator Background g projection, which preserves direction and shape but distorts �I Aerial Photography distance and area. A projection that preserves area, such as the Albers equal-area conic projection, should be used if more accurate calculations of distance or area are required. 7 This product is generated from the USDA-NRCS certified data as of the version date(s) listed below. Soil Survey Area: St. Lucie County, Florida Survey Area Data: Version 11, Sep 17, 2018 Soil map units are labeled (as space allows) for map scales 1:50,000 or larger. Date(s) aerial images were photographed: Dec 31, 2009—Dec 15, 2017 The orthophoto'or other base map on which the soil lines were compiled and digitized probably differs from the background imagery displayed on these maps. As a result, some minor shifting of map unit boundaries may be evident. Custom Soil Resource Report Map Unit Legend -Map Unit Symbol Map Unit Name Acres in AOI Percent of AOI 21 Lawnwood and Myakka sands 3.0 61.6% 44 Tantile and Pomona sands 0.2 3.1 % 51 Waveland-Lawnwood complex, depressional 1.7 35.2% Totals for Area of Interest 4.8 100.0% Map Unit Descriptions The map units delineated on the detailed soil maps in a soil survey represent the soils or miscellaneous areas, in the survey area. The map unit descriptions, along with the maps, can be used to determine the composition and properties of a unit. A map unit delineation on a soil map represents an area dominated by one or more major kinds of soil or miscellaneous areas. A map unit is identified and named according to the taxonomic classification of the dominant soils. Within a taxonomic class there are precisely defined limits for the properties of the soils. On the landscape, however, the soils are natural phenomena, and they have the characteristic variability of all natural phenomena. Thus, the range of some observed properties may extend beyond the limits defined for a taxonomic class. Areas of soils of a single taxonomic class rarely, if ever, can be mapped without including -areas of other taxonomic classes. Consequently, every map unit, is made up of the soils or miscellaneous areas for which it is named and some minor components that belong to taxonomic classes other than those of the major soils. Most minor soils have properties similar to those of the dominant soil or soils in the map unit, and thus they do not affect use and management. These are called noncontrasting, or similar, components. They may or may not be mentioned in a particular map unit description. Other minor components, however, have properties and behavioral characteristics divergent enough to affect use or to require different management. These are called contrasting, or dissimilar, components. They generally are in small areas and could not be mapped separately because of the scale used. Some small areas of strongly contrasting soils or miscellaneous areas are identified by a special symbol on the maps. If included in the database for a given area, the contrasting minor components are identified in the map unit descriptions along with some characteristics of each. A few areas of minor components may not have been observed, and consequently they are not mentioned in the descriptions, especially where the pattern was so complex that it was impractical to make enough observations to identify all the soils and miscellaneous areas on the landscape. The presence of minor components in a map unit in no way diminishes the usefulness or accuracy of the data. The objective of mapping is not to delineate pure taxonomic classes but rather to separate the landscape into landforms or landform segments that have similar use and management requirements. The delineation of such segments on the map provides sufficient information for the 0 Custom Soil Resource Report development of resource plans. If intensive use of small areas is planned, however, onsite investigation is needed to define and locate the soils and miscellaneous areas. An identifying symbol precedes the map unit name in the map unit descriptions. Each description includes general facts about the unit and gives important soil properties and qualities. Soils that have profiles that are almost alike make up a soil series. Except for differences in texture of the surface layer, all the soils of a series have major horizons that are similar in composition, thickness, and arrangement. Soils of one series can differ in texture of the surface layer, slope, stoniness, salinity, degree of erosion, and other characteristics that affect their use. On the basis of such differences, a soil series is divided into soil phases. Most of the areas shown on the detailed soil maps are phases of soil series. The name of a soil phase commonly indicates a feature that affects use or management. For example, Alpha silt loam, 0 to 2 percent slopes, is a phase of the Alpha series. Some map units are made up of two or more major soils or miscellaneous areas. These map units are complexes, associations, or undifferentiated groups. A complex consists of two or more soils or miscellaneous areas in such an intricate pattern or in such small areas that they cannot be shown separately on the maps. The pattern and proportion of the soils or miscellaneous areas are somewhat similar in all areas. Alpha -Beta complex, 0 to 6 percent slopes, is an example. An association is made up of two or more geographically associated soils or miscellaneous areas that are shown as one unit on the maps. Because of present or anticipated uses of the map units in the survey area, it was not considered practical or necessary to map the soils or miscellaneous areas separately. The pattern and relative proportion of the soils or miscellaneous areas are somewhat similar. Alpha -Beta association, 0 to 2 percent slopes, is an example. An undifferentiated group is made up of two or more soils or miscellaneous areas that could be mapped individually but are mapped as one unit because similar interpretations can be made for use and management. The pattern and proportion of the soils or miscellaneous areas in a mapped area are not uniform. An area can be made up of only one of the major soils or miscellaneous areas, or it can be made up of all of them. Alpha and Beta soils, 0 to 2 percent slopes, is an example. Some surveys include miscellaneous areas. Such areas have little or no soil material and support little or no vegetation. Rock outcrop is an example.