The swimming raft describes it exactly man_made=pontoon was my first thought but wasn't sure (was checking on a mobile device on the bus) so I'll use that.
With tagging the ladder, the pontoons can rotate a fair bit so how sensitive is the position of something like a ladder? Swimming area is also something I plan on marking as these swimming areas do have buoys on like a cable around the perimeter marking the boundary. Thank you to everyone for their input so far, the help is very much appreciated. On 26 Jan. 2017 21:14, "Andrew Davidson" <thesw...@gmail.com> wrote: On 25/01/17 22:05, Andrew Harvey wrote: > As for the pontoon, per > https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:man_made%3Dpier "The > man_made=pier tag is used for a raised walkway over water supported by > pillars made of metal/wood, or floating and secured using chains", > plus floating=yes > > It would depend on whether we are talking about a floating jetty: http://www.letsonslanding.com/images/IMG_4212dock_wide.jpg or what our American friends would call a swimming raft: http://manitoulincedar.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/swim-raft-2013.jpg The first one is a pier but the second one isn't. It seems that there are two ways to tag a swimming raft. The first is from OpenSeaMap seamark:type=pontoon https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:seamark:type%3Dpontoon There's 36 of these. The other is man_made=pontoon (There's 87 of these). On 26/01/17 10:25, Graeme Fitzpatrick wrote: > Would you then mark the inside of the pontoon as a swimming pool? > > Could you mark a swimming pool in the middle of a lake? > Maybe swimming_area https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:leisure%3Dswimming_area ? _______________________________________________ Talk-au mailing list Talk-au@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-au
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