Am 19/gen/2014 um 19:23 schrieb Colin Smale colin.sm...@xs4all.nl:
Bottom line - we need a distinction between the vehicle (cycle) and the
activity (cycling).
yes, as others have mentioned, there was recently a discussion about this on
tagging. the wiki defines bicycle as a legal tag
Jean-Marc Liotier j...@liotier.org wrote:
On 01/19/2014 07:23 PM, Colin Smale wrote:
On 2014-01-19 18:32, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2014/1/19 Colin Smale colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
mailto:colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
The standard sign for no vehicles (red ring on white
background) does
I frequently need to map short pieces of a bicycle routes where cyclists
have to dismount and walk their bicyle on a one-road in the wrong
direction.
I need something like a one-directinal bicycle dismount.
Any suggestions?
Volker
Padova, Italy
___
I agree.
In the UK there is a difference between no cycles and no cycling.
Although in general you may be correct that a dismounted cyclist is
effectively a pedestrian, there are also footways (or whatever you want
to call them) signed as no cycles, which means that in these cases a
2014/1/19 Colin Smale colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
there are also footways (or whatever you want to call them) signed as no
cycles, which means that in these cases a dismounted cyclist is not
equivalent to a pedestrian.
If foot=yes (explicit or implied) implies bicycle=dismount which
corresponds
Am 19.01.2014 12:06, schrieb Colin Smale:
In the UK there is a difference between no cycles and no cycling.
Although in general you may be correct that a dismounted cyclist is
effectively a pedestrian, there are also footways (or whatever you
want to call them) signed as no cycles, which means
Well, certainly I have seen them applied to large permissive areas
like shopping centres. If we don't use bicycle=no for this, how about
bicycle=prohibited?
The standard sign for no vehicles (red ring on white background) does
not apply to bicycles being pushed by hand, but as a bicycle is
2014/1/19 Colin Smale colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
Well, certainly I have seen them applied to large permissive areas like
shopping centres. If we don't use bicycle=no for this, how about
bicycle=prohibited?
yes, it is also my guess that shopping centres might forbid bringing your
bike even if
On 01/19/2014 07:23 PM, Colin Smale wrote:
On 2014-01-19 18:32, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
2014/1/19 Colin Smale colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
mailto:colin.sm...@xs4all.nl
The standard sign for no vehicles (red ring on white
background) does not apply to bicycles being pushed by hand,