On 2012-11-19 10:52, Benoit Coumont wrote :
Hello everybody,
I found this file with the localisations of zones 30 in Belgium
(streets where the speed is limited to 30 km/h). It's collected by
some people on this forum of gps users with the objective to see them
on their gps software:
http://www.gpspassion.com/forumsen/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=123619
I writed to Jean Herman (hermanjea...@hotmail.com), the manager of
this collect. He's ok to give this work to the OSM community. He told
me the difficulty to organize the management and confess the slow
death of this project. He didn't know OpenStreetMap, so I presented to
him the advantages of OSM could give for this work. But I'm not sure
he's ready or able to use OSM on his gps.
Anyway, there are data we could use. But it's saved on a strange file
(ov2) non recognized by the famous gspbabel. He use a free (free as a
free beer and not as freedom of speech) software for windows called
POIedit. I only use Linux on my computers so I couldn't do the
conversion. Could somebody do that and post the result on the wiki?
What do you mean, "only Linux"? With "only Ubuntu", I ran the following
command
perl -pe 's/^^(.*), +(.*),.*\]
+([^(]*)\(?([^)]*).*\@.*/$2\t$1\tZones30\/zone30.png\t32,32\t0,0\t$3\t$4/'
zone30_BE.utf8> POIs.txt
that transformed the file to this format
<http://www.papou.byethost9.com/maps/Zones30/POIs.txt> to be used to
produce this POI map
<http://www.papou.byethost9.com/maps/OpenLayers_Vector_fast.html?zoom=11&lat=50.53654&lon=5.53611&layers=BFFFFFTFFFFFT>.
Other POIs demos via *+* button. I have a version with Google and Bing
as backgrounds, but as they're earning money with that and give me
nothing of it, I don't show these maps ;-)
The "only other" system does most probably not run that command and it
doesn't know UTF-8 either. I've had to convert the asc file to UTF-8.
All the files are here <http://www.papou.byethost9.com/maps/Zones30/>.
After installing Wine, you will probably be able to run POIedit.
If someone put this on the OSM database for his neighborhood, for his
district and for his city, we could get quickly a map of speed
limitations... Itoworld published a map to see that :
http://www.itoworld.com/map/35#fullscreen
Unfortunately, one shouldn't write a file and use it to map on OSM.
One should update OSM and produce the files with it.
To update OSM, one must know the coordinates for the start and end of
the limit.
I'm particularly convinced convinced that speed moderation is the best
way to rediscover conviviality in our residential streets. Also, I
added the 6 zones 30, corresponding to the seven school sites, in my
neighborhood (St-Léonard, Liège) to demonstrate to politicals and
residents that a wide zone 30 extended area would be more readable and
consistent. An European petition is just launched to invite EU to take
position. Informations and signs are on this website : http://30kmh.eu
I first thought of advising you to write a "howto update OSM for speed
limits", but that's too dangerous to be done by anyone as it involves
splitting roads.
Rather, I would explain the people how to record the beginning and end
GPS decimal coordinates of the limits while waiting for the children and
to use OpenStreetBugs
<http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OpenStreetBugs>: go to here
<http://openstreetbugs.schokokeks.org/?zoom=8&lat=50.48674&lon=4.61604&layers=B0T>
, high-zoom to the street, click on it and enter modification requests
"limite 30 km/h LL.LLLLL l.lllll".
Or possibly "street number, nnn m north, sss m south".
I volunteer to make updates if I'm not the only one and if there is some
way to send me warning e-mail without publishing my e-mail address, such
as a mailing list.
Cordialement,
André.
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