Because back in the day, people complained about the spelling and that it had
to be in the 'British' way. So, it's under 'centre_turn_lane'.
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:centre_turn_lane
Key:centre_turn_lane - OpenStreetMap
On 06/20/2017 06:43 AM, Paul Johnson wrote:
> Depends on the region. Oregon, Oklahoma, and California often includes
> the arrows anyway.
Texas often includes the arrows as well.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
http://www.rantroulette.com
http://www.skqrecordquest.com
On Mon, Jun 19, 2017 at 3:37 PM, wrote:
> The turn lanes plugin seems to support this nicely: https://www.dropbox.
> com/s/8wmp5h2cn931pic/Screenshot%202017-06-19%2014.33.40.jpg?dl=0 — even
> though the center lane is rarely marked with left turn arrows, as suggested
> by the
On Mon, Jun 19, 2017 at 10:44 PM, John F. Eldredge
wrote:
> Judging from the markings, that is a turn lane shared by both directions.
> You cannot legally use it to pass a car in the main driving lane, you can
> only use it to make a left turn. Lanes of this type are
On Mon, Jun 19, 2017 at 10:37 PM, wrote:
> The turn lanes plugin seems to support this nicely:
> https://www.dropbox.com/s/8wmp5h2cn931pic/Screenshot%202017-06-19%2014.33.40.jpg?dl=0
> — even though the center lane is rarely marked with left turn arrows, as
> suggested by the
> > Me and my Telenav colleagues are editing lane numbers in Detroit area.
> We found some cases that looks like this (42.43651692568901,
> -83.51102781049859): Our question is: what is the central lane used for and
> how do we map it? Should we count it as a separate lane and have 3 lanes in
>
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