On 1/21/2012 9:42 PM, Paul Johnson wrote:
On Sat, 2012-01-21 at 20:56 -0500, Nathan Edgars II wrote:
On 1/21/2012 8:50 PM, Paul Johnson wrote:
On Sat, 2012-01-21 at 13:39 -0600, Toby Murray wrote:
Unfortunately I don't have a good picture of this myself so here is a
kind of crappy streetview shot: http://kan.st/yG

The sign carries the name of this area. It is sitting in the middle of
a short section of split carriageway residential road indicating that
"you are now entering the Sharingbrook neighborhood. I would say that
includes the road.

That would be boundary=administrative.

So much for your "ground truth", eh?

Are there examples of places where neighborhoods aren't administrative
units of larger cities?

Pretty much everywhere. Geographic administrative units are typically larger than single neighborhoods, especially suburban neighborhoods such as Sharingbrook. (It's not clear that Manhattan, KS has any such units; its commissioners are elected at-large.) Are there examples of places where there is a one-to-one mapping between neighborhoods and administrative units?

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