This tagging (a short section marked as oneway) is also quite usual in Germany for this case, but restriction=no_entry is slowly becoming popular too.
In Germany these streets are called "Unechte Einbahnstraße" (faux oneway street) and happen quite often there when a city council or traffic department wants to introduce a one-way street but can't because they didn't work out yet how the legal consequences of a real oneway street would be for some edge cases (e.g. two-way tram traffic) or if it would cause too many problems for residents if they aren't allowed to reverse while on their street. Am Samstag, 1. Juni 2024, 19:47:40 CEST schrieb Mateusz Konieczny via Tagging: > May 21, 2024, 17:19 by dieterdre...@gmail.com: > > Am Di., 21. Mai 2024 um 15:01 Uhr schrieb Mateusz Konieczny via Tagging > > <tagging@openstreetmap.org>: > >> In such case I would typically place such tags on > >> a short section (meter or two) of way near end where > >> such restriction is applied. > > > > the restriction is not applied to a section, it is applied to a point, you > > may not cross the sign in this direction. > yes, but tagging very short stretch of road (say 3m where it is not > connected to anything) conveys the same info without using relations _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging