I mostly met them on tennis courts. For my common understanding, I would be able to break through a net with a sharp knife while I would struggle to do so with a fence. This would still fit with material=* but isn't there a difference in construction between fence and net where the first is free standing where the second one is tied up.
Wonder how a net could fit under fence in foreign languages or if it is much easier to have an own main value for it. cu fly Am 07.01.2015 um 05:50 schrieb Andrew Harvey: > I've also used it to tag nets in the water used to provide swimming > areas safe from sharks. > > On 07/01/2015 11:42 am, "johnw" <jo...@mac.com <mailto:jo...@mac.com>> > wrote: > > There are 544 uses of barrier=net, and I want to add it into the wiki. > > For many golf courses, driving ranges, and baseball fields world > wide, and many school grounds in Japan, they may have a fence or > wall, and in addition a separate expansive and very tall netting, in > some cases 5 to 10 stores tall for a driving range, supported by > steel or concrete poles (that look like telephone poles). > > In many instances, the net alone is the sole barrier between a golf > course and adjacent property, forgoing a wall or fence, when > trespassing or privacy concerns is not an issue. > > I don’t think these kinds of nets fits very well with =fence, so I’d > like to add the value to the wiki page (and then for rendering in > -carto) > > > Javbw. _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging