§ I·What you're looking atThe records on the map
This map is not exhaustive. Davidson County's public environmental record contains thousands of entries across thirteen categories; what's shown above is a curated set of the named sites that appear by name in the Field Guide chapters — the Superfund sites profiled in Hazard III, the landfills profiled in Hazard IX, a DCERP-registered dry cleaner discussed in Hazard II, the CSX freight corridors detailed in Hazard VII, and the TVA / NES transmission backbone discussed in Hazard VIII. Every feature you can click on this map exists, is publicly documented, and is reachable through a free agency database.
The point of showing these specific records — rather than a density-map of every UST or every registered cleaner in the county — is editorial. Each pin or corridor on the map has a chapter behind it. Click any feature, read the popup, and follow the chapter link to the full explanation of what that record category actually means for a property nearby.
§ II·What it doesn't showThe other twelve thousand records
The records on this map are a small visible sample of a much larger underlying picture. A single Parcelscope report on a single Davidson County address typically surfaces somewhere between fifteen and seventy individual records — underground storage tanks within a mile, every DCERP-registered facility, every Toxic Release Inventory facility, the closest transmission line and rail corridor, the closest landfill, the radon-zone designation, and the prevailing-wind context that ties them together. Reading those records against your specific address, with consistent distance and direction conventions and the interpretive framing from the Field Guide chapters, is the work a Parcelscope report does.
The map is a way to see that the records exist. The report is what tells you what they mean for a specific parcel.
See what the public record says about your address.
Thirteen categories of environmental record, read against your specific Davidson County address, with prevailing-wind context and per-category scoring. One PDF, delivered within twenty-four hours. Forty-nine dollars.
Begin a report — $49 →Chapters of the Field Guide
- Underground Storage Tanks
- Dry-Cleaner Solvent Sites
- Superfund & Federal Cleanup
- Toxic Release Inventory
- Golf-Course Proximity
- Major Roads & Interstates
- Active Rail Corridors
- High-Voltage Transmission
- Landfills & Waste Sites
- Radon
- Aviation Noise
- Tree Canopy Coverage
- Event-Venue Density
- How to Check Your Address
Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors. Site coordinates verified against EPA SEMS, TDEC DCERP registry, Metro Public Works post-closure records, and operator-published infrastructure maps as of May 2026. Corridor paths are schematic representations of the routes documented in the corresponding Field Guide chapters and are not survey-grade.