[talk-au] Fwd: [OSM-talk] Proliferation of path vs. footway

2009-08-10 Thread Liz
SUMMARY
--  Forwarded Message  --

Subject: [OSM-talk]  Proliferation of path vs. footway
Date: Tue, 11 Aug 2009
From: Lauri Kytömaa lkyto...@cc.hut.fi
To: t...@openstreetmap.org

Nop wrote:
I think we should step back one step.
The discussion here seems about to fall victim to the same mechanisms


Trying to keep my comment general at first to find what are the needs:
what should be in the highway tag and what are local factors. This
turned into a stream of thoughts but hopefully coherent enough to
breed some more refined thoughts.


Things that all agree on:

highway=footway:
Something, where walking is allowed and possible for someone.
(walking might be and is allowed and possible elsewhere, too)

highway=cycleway:
something, where cycling is allowed and possible
(even a German dedicated/signposted cycleway fits that description,
i.e. it's not a oneway dependency - not all things tagged
highway=cycleway are german signposted cycleways). Pedestrian access
undefined - might be country dependent but not supported (yet), so
there has about always been a suggestion in the wiki to always tag it
with foot=no/yes/designated.

highway=path:
something not wide enough for four wheeled vehicles OR where
motorvehicles are forbidden (unless otherwise indicated by
snowmobile/agricultural=designated or similar).

Anything with
wheelchair=no: unsuitable for wheelchair users or other mobility
impaired

Anything with
highway=footway + foot=no (+ snowmobile=yes) would be silly

highway=track
implies that it's wide enough for a small motorcar to drive on,
even if it's illegal.



Things that people don't agree on:

1) Is a highway=cycleway + foot=yes any different from a
highway=footway + bicycle=yes
2) Is it significant if there signs read footway + bicycle allowed
or combined foot and cycleway (presumably a difference in the legal
maxspeed at least in Germany)
3a) is a forest trail any different from a paved sidewalk
3b) is a forest trail any different from an unpaved but built footpath
4) is a constructed way with the traffic sign no motorvehicles any
different from a constructed way with the traffic sign combined foot
and cycleway (or with a cycleway-signpost in the UK)



User needs:
Pedestrian / Cyclist / Horse rider / Urban planner / Statistician /
Safety engineer / Accessibility analyst / Crime investigator ...

A pedestrian considers mostly the surface and the build quality of the
ways _allowed_ to him. A trail in an urban forest (picture 1), formed
by repeated use only, is not usable for an average pedestrian, even if
a normally fit person in sneakers would go for a walk there sometimes,
even if only to walk the dog. A mountain trail is effectively the same,
even if more difficult to use. Just about every person, even in (very)
high heels would walk down (picture 2) if the way hasn't turned into a
puddle of mud. And a western world way constructed for walking usually
doesn't deteriorate that much. Then there's the third variant
in-between (3), which some would use and other's wouldn't.

1) http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Image:06072009(045).jpg
2) http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Image:Path-motorcarnohorseno.jpg
3) http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Image:Path-footyes.jpg

Some cyclist disregard access rights and consider the surface and hills
only, while others would want to drive on dedicated cycleways only; on
those where only cyclists are allowed. Most common cyclist probably
don't care if there are pedestrians involved, they just wan't to use
legal and properly built ways and avoid driving amongst the cars.


Horse riding is something to think about, too.

For signposted bridleways it's quite unambiguous, even if a British
bridleway allows pedestrians and cyclists, too, whereas the German
(and Finnish) legally signposted bridleways allow neither.

But on a built way signposted as no motor vehicles horse riding might
be legal, but if it's signposted as a footway, cycleway or the
combined foot and cycleway (picture 4), horse riding is not allowed.
4) http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Image:Path-lighttraffic.jpg

On the forest trails (picture 1 again) horse riding might again be
legal or private/permissive. If the picture 2 didn't have the no
horses sign, I'd think around here that it's legal to ride a horse
there.

City planners possibly need to consider if the way is signposted for
combined use or with a no motor vehicles - first ones the city might
have to keep in good walking condition to avoid expenses when someone
breaks his bike because of the unfixed potholes but the latter ways
don't possibly carry such limitations. On the other hand that doesn't
usually interest the cyclists at all even if it is so.

This can and does have implications when dedicing where to build the 
light traffic ways in the next suburb to be built - or where to add new 
cycleways to improve the percentage of cycling commuters.

Statisticians and safety engineers could want to know whether
(un)segregated 

Re: [talk-au] Fwd: [OSM-talk] Proliferation of path vs. footway

2009-08-10 Thread Roy Wallace
On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 8:39 AM, Lized...@billiau.net wrote:
 SUMMARY

 Trying to keep my comment general at first to find what are the needs:
 what should be in the highway tag and what are local factors. This
 turned into a stream of thoughts but hopefully coherent enough to
 breed some more refined thoughts.

Nice work Liz, thought I might comment on just a few things you raised.

 Things that all agree on:

 highway=footway:
 Something, where walking is allowed and possible for someone.
 (walking might be and is allowed and possible elsewhere, too)

 highway=cycleway:
 something, where cycling is allowed and possible
 (even a German dedicated/signposted cycleway fits that description,
 i.e. it's not a oneway dependency - not all things tagged
 highway=cycleway are german signposted cycleways). Pedestrian access
 undefined - might be country dependent but not supported (yet), so
 there has about always been a suggestion in the wiki to always tag it
 with foot=no/yes/designated.

 highway=path:
 something not wide enough for four wheeled vehicles OR where
 motorvehicles are forbidden (unless otherwise indicated by
 snowmobile/agricultural=designated or similar).

 Anything with
 wheelchair=no: unsuitable for wheelchair users or other mobility
 impaired

 highway=track
 implies that it's wide enough for a small motorcar to drive on,
 even if it's illegal.

I would love to see the wiki updated with these definitions. IMHO the
wiki is precisely the place to document the things that all agree
on.

 Things that people don't agree on:

 1) Is a highway=cycleway + foot=yes any different from a
 highway=footway + bicycle=yes

This problem arises because cycleway and footway have vague
implications. These implications either need to be agreed upon and
precisely documented, or the tags should be used with additional tags
to clarify the implications, or they should be deprecated.

 4) is a constructed way with the traffic sign no motorvehicles any
 different from a constructed way with the traffic sign combined foot
 and cycleway (or with a cycleway-signpost in the UK)

designated=* and no=* should be sufficient, right?

 Conclusion:

 Some users care most about whether it's a built way or not, others want
 to know what the sign was (are there likely users of other transport
 methods) and some care only Am I allowed or not?

What do you mean by built way? surface=*? The sign and/or legality
should be covered by designated=* and no=*, right?

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Re: [talk-au] Fwd: [OSM-talk] Proliferation of path vs. footway

2009-08-10 Thread Elizabeth Dodd
On Tue, 11 Aug 2009, Roy Wallace wrote:
 Nice work Liz, thought I might comment on just a few things you raised.
not my work Roy!!

-- 
BOFH excuse #297:

Too many interrupts


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