On Fri, 3 Apr 2020 at 15:20, nathan case wrote:
> The two main components of the green, a wood and a grass area, are separately
> mapped as such.
>
> Where would you add the designation tag? To the boundary or to the two main
> landuse components? Or would you create a relation so that the desig
Thanks both - as it currently stands the whole town green is outlined by
"boundary=protected_area & protect_class=21 & protection_title=common" (as
town_green wasn’t an option, though, I actually added
protection_title2=town_green).
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:boundary%3Dprotected_a
In the past the term urban commons was widely used in the ecological
literature for all sorts of (mainly) grassy spaces in towns. If one wanted
a catch-all designation this might be suitable, although I think it would
be perhaps better used to replace the usages of landuse=grass &
leisure=common in
On Fri, 3 Apr 2020 at 14:31, Robert Whittaker (OSM lists)
wrote:
> What I would do with these is to separate the legal status from the
> physical and usage characteristics. First I would tag the legal
> status, using the designation=* tag (which was set up for such
> purposes) i.e. designation=tow
On Fri, 3 Apr 2020 at 11:49, nathan case wrote:
> I made a recent edit to a local area that has recently been designated a
> “Town Green”.
>
> Edit: https://www.openstreetmap.org/changeset/82973329
What I would do with these is to separate the legal status from the
physical and usage characteris
I've spotted some edits using this, such as:
https://overpass-api.de/achavi/?changeset=82807938&relations=true
After a ropey start, in general I've been quite impressed by Amazon's
edits, but this one looks quite ropey, the service road drawn in is very
ropey and it looks like you've missed the c
> But village greens and public open green spaces are normally managed, or at
> least mown, by the local authority. They are not left in a wild or natural
> state.
Indeed, that’s why this is not a traditional village green - otherwise I would
have used that tag ;-).
This is an area of mixed l
On 03/04/2020 13:40, nathan case wrote:
I ruled it out because, from the same wiki:
"This tag is intended for (usually urban) parks with managed greenery" and "parks
not so designed and manicured, but rather left in a more wild and natural state should not get this
tag, instead, use another ta
I ruled it out because, from the same wiki:
"This tag is intended for (usually urban) parks with managed greenery" and
"parks not so designed and manicured, but rather left in a more wild and
natural state should not get this tag, instead, use another tag like
boundary=national_park"
Thanks.
Thanks, I’d ruled out village green because of the Wiki description: “a
distinctive area of grassy public land in a village centre”. This is not that.
In fact using that tag in that way is listed under “incorrect use”.
But maybe the legal status overrules the Wiki description!
From: Colin Smale
What is wrong with Park?
From the wiki: "A park is an area of open space for recreational use,
usually designed and in semi-natural state with grassy areas, trees and
bushes. Parks are usually urban"
Martin.
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Considering that it is legally and functionally the same as a Village
Green, I would say use the same tag i.e. landuse=village_green. It may
be *called* a town green because it belongs to a settlement that is a
town (who decides that is a whole other discussion) and/or has a Town
Council (which is,
Hi all,
I made a recent edit to a local area that has recently been designated a "Town
Green".
Edit: https://www.openstreetmap.org/changeset/82973329
News:
https://www.lancasterguardian.co.uk/news/lancasters-freemans-wood-looks-set-become-town-green-after-eight-year-battle-1357617
For those th
So, will I have to quote a 20-digit alpha-numeric code, if I want to order
something from Amazon? ..or get my grandchildren to send me a birthday card?
(I do not know what these UPRN's look like, but I bet they are not as easy to
remember as "Rose Cottage, 3 Church Lane, XX3 4ZZ")
We have to thi
On 03/04/2020 09:27, Robert Whittaker (OSM lists) wrote:
There will presumably be a drive in government circles to store
addresses as UPRN's, and then fetch the associated location and
address data from AddressBase. Assuming Rob's interpretation is
correct (I think it probably is) then this co
On Thu, 2 Apr 2020 at 22:19, RobJN wrote:
> It's all a bit unclear but from what I've read it sounds like there will be
> a release of the UPRN / UPSN identifiers and their associated geometries
> ("coordinates" in some text). I see no reference to address data being part
> of the release.
There
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