As a general rule, bicycles are prohibited from freeways in the US east of
the Mississippi and allowed on rural freeways in the west. Of course this
is a very broad definition and only a starting point for understanding. The
key point is that people in the east often assume that bicycles are
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 12:16 AM, Clifford Snow cliff...@snowandsnow.us
wrote:
I think the original question is are there bicycle routes that include
Interstate Highways. From what we've learned, Interstate Highways can be
tagged to allow bicycles where permitted by law. But just because
I think last time I doublechecked it, something like 30 or 35 states allow
nonmotorized access to freeways, making those that don't somewhat of a
minority. However, given that 97%(?) of the population of the US lives in
the ~215 lower-48 metropolitan areas (that is, pretty much any city large
This is an interesting conversation. Since I'm on the east coast, I've
never seen a bicycle on a freeway. Since I'm a bit of a road geek, I ask
this very question of my fellow road geeks on our discussion forum. It
seems many states have explicit laws allowing bicycles on the highway.
Follow it
Great start on this Minh,
I tried to tackle this in the Baltimore Washington region last year. After
reading the wiki, I decided on the following classifications:
* hamlet: census population was less than 200
* village: census pop. between 200 and 1
* town: census pop. between 10001 and
On 1/12/15 2:00 PM, Elliott Plack wrote:
This is an interesting conversation. Since I'm on the east coast, I've
never seen a bicycle on a freeway. Since I'm a bit of a road geek, I
ask this very question of my fellow road geeks on our discussion
forum. It seems many states have explicit laws
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 1:05 PM, Richard Welty rwe...@averillpark.net
wrote:
in fact, here in NYS there is a class of trunk-ish roads
called Urban Expressways where bikes and pedestrians
are forbidden; sometimes it's posted but sometimes it's
not.
Having commuted by freeway by bicycle in a
Greetings US OSM'ers,
I'm working with some other locals on another import, this time for
Baltimore City. In thinking of good attributes to add to buildings, I
thought it might be pertinent to denote the city's 16K+ vacant buildings
[1] on the OSM buildings. Have other people been doing this?
Tonight! Be there or be spherical Mercator.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/events/c98gk0o8cjli2crjlcoa6f0vom8
Martijn
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On 1/12/15 4:27 PM, Elliott Plack wrote:
I'm working with some other locals on another import, this time for
Baltimore City. In thinking of good attributes to add to buildings, I
thought it might be pertinent to denote the city's 16K+ vacant
buildings [1] on the OSM buildings. Have other
In the dataset, those ones are owned by the city. When the property becomes
vacant and the landlord can't pay the taxes, the landlords default and the
city scoops the property up for non-payment of taxes. The 16K in this
dataset are just the ones the city owns. There are apparently many more
that
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 1:49 PM, Elliott Plack elliott.pl...@gmail.com
wrote:
If I were to classify abandoned buildings myself, I'd go by the wiki
definition which would include buildings that have fallen into serious
disrepair and which could only be put back into operation with expensive
I discovered that shop=vacant has over 6,000 tags. That actually makes
sense. The building is vacant with a for lease sign. Many are former shops
for example Blockbuster.
Clifford
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 2:18 PM, Clifford Snow cliff...@snowandsnow.us
wrote:
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 1:49 PM,
That was a horrible but especially clever pun.
On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 3:01 PM, Martijn van Exel m...@rtijn.org wrote:
Tonight! Be there or be spherical Mercator.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/events/c98gk0o8cjli2crjlcoa6f0vom8
Martijn
___
2015-01-09 12:45 GMT+01:00 Minh Nguyen m...@nguyen.cincinnati.oh.us:
but more importantly, it accurately reflects what going to town means in
the surrounding area. That seems to be the idea behind the wiki's nebulous
definitions.
+1
cheers,
Martin
On Sun, Jan 11, 2015 at 11:43 PM, John F. Eldredge j...@jfeldredge.com
wrote:
By contrast, I am not aware of any Interstate highways in the southeast
USA that allow bicycles. From my experience, every entrance ramp has signs
forbidding non-motorized traffic and mopeds.
All the more reason
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