Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Robert Norris
Ffordd_Pen_Llech is steep but it's one way (down), so if you're looking for challenge to go up it on your bicycle you have to do so illegally. Apparently Vale Street (http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/32024547) in Bristol is meant to be very steep, but I don't know the incline. (Doesn't seem to

Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Dave F
On 11/01/2017 18:18, Jez Nicholson wrote: Google is telling me Hardknott Pass and Rosedale Chimney Bank at 33% for England. They used to do hill-climb car racing up Porlock Hill in Exmoor but that is reported as a mere 25% I can't help but think that there are some short side-roads that

Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Dave F
On 11/01/2017 14:37, SK53 wrote: Now the question is a) is there any Lidar data; and b) has John Murray processed it! ...Or if, indeed, it is in England. DaveF --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus

Re: [Talk-GB] natural=heath

2017-01-11 Thread SK53
I'm currently reviewing some Corine imported data in Brittany in an area I visited in 2015 with a view to understanding more about how natural=heath has been used. Jerry On 11 January 2017 at 19:27, ael wrote: > On Mon, Jan 09, 2017 at 11:53:51AM +, SK53 wrote: >

Re: [Talk-GB] natural=heath

2017-01-11 Thread ael
On Mon, Jan 09, 2017 at 11:53:51AM +, SK53 wrote: > Somehow I have been oblivious to the fact that large numbers of polygons > tagged natural=heath have been added over the past few months to OSM. I have just found the message to the mapper who changed area on Bodmin Moor to heath: that was

Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Jez Nicholson
Google is telling me Hardknott Pass and Rosedale Chimney Bank at 33% for England. They used to do hill-climb car racing up Porlock Hill in Exmoor but that is reported as a mere 25% I can't help but think that there are some short side-roads that are steeper. They may also have further criteria

Re: [Talk-GB] Realtions advice needed

2017-01-11 Thread SK53
Relations to group elements of a street together (associatedStreet is used more widely) are very rarely used by data consumers. Transferring other tags to the relation would therefore effectively remove the road from the sight of renderers and routers. In general it's just better to add your

Re: [Talk-GB] Realtions advice needed

2017-01-11 Thread Marc Gemis
AFAIK, there are no tools that support this relation. So moving an attribute (e.g. name) from the way to the relation will break all data consumers (renderer, Nominatim, etc.) that read names on ways. m. On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 4:05 PM, Andy Mabbett wrote: > No, not

[Talk-GB] Realtions advice needed

2017-01-11 Thread Andy Mabbett
No, not marriage guidance ;-) I've only limited experience of making relations in OSM. Today, I made this one: https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/6868921 How could it be improved? Should any tags be moved from the individual parts, to the relation? -- Andy Mabbett @pigsonthewing

Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread SK53
Now the question is a) is there any Lidar data; and b) has John Murray processed it! On 11 January 2017 at 14:06, Paul Berry wrote: > I always thought Harlech laid claim to this at ~40% > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ffordd_Pen_Llech >

Re: [Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Paul Berry
I always thought Harlech laid claim to this at ~40% https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ffordd_Pen_Llech http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/71230443 Regards, *Paul* On 11 January 2017 at 12:23, Jez Nicholson wrote: > Baldwin Street in New Zealand has been named the World's

[Talk-GB] the steepest residential street in England

2017-01-11 Thread Jez Nicholson
Baldwin Street in New Zealand has been named the World's steepest residential street at 35%. John Murray from Murray Data caused a bit of a stir by claiming St Marys Hill, Chester was steeper at 36%