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> On 19. Mar 2018, at 22:59, Graeme Fitzpatrick wrote:
>
> But if you don't add it to a building, where does it go?
>
usually a node or a polygon, you can make it a multipolygon if you want the
same extent as a building
> & what do you call the building that's the off
Well, in some villages there are palaces that were never fortified. This is
the case, for example, of the Palace of Count of Superunda, north of this
point:
https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/42.25708/-2.63038
It is just a big abandoned house in the middle of a village. There are many
palace-ho
The tags amenity=theatre, theatre:type=amphi is used for this:
https://taginfo.openstreetmap.org/tags/theatre%3Atype=amphi
Kind of clunky, but at least doesn't assume it's a building.
On Tue, Mar 20, 2018 at 12:27 PM, Tomasz Wójcik wrote:
> I think there is a problem with outdoor tribunes/ seat
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> On 20. Mar 2018, at 18:55, Colin Smale wrote:
>
> What about modern palaces, or buildings still in use as a palace?
Would you say historic=palace doesn’t apply?
is “modern” referring to an architectural style? “In use as a palace” means
“residence of someone”?
cheers,
What about modern palaces, or buildings still in use as a palace?
A manor is an area of land, not a building. xxx=manor_house would be
more appropriate.
I agree that neither are hyponym / hypernym of castle - that is
something completely different like "fortified against attack". A former
castl
For me, it's obvious that we should choose:
* historic=palace for palaces
* historic=manor for manors
Castles and palaces/ manors are different types of objects and it shouldn't be mixed as
some subtypes of castle. Of coure there are examples "on the edge" but taking
them as subtypes of castle
I think there is a problem with outdoor tribunes/ seating steps correct
tagging.
- leisure=stadium tag is for whole complex, not only for stadium (it
includes side pitches, parking etc.)
- building=stadium tag is for stadium as a building (in OSM we assume
that building is a construction, wher