which was historically a true funicular but is now technically a pair of
>> inclined elevators: https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/29403578
>>
>> The distinction between a funicular and an inclined elevator is to me a
>> technical one. Many inclined elevators, li
ical one. Many inclined elevators, like the previous example, are
> named as funiculars, and passengers may not even notice that they are on
> one or the other - for all they know, they're just on a vehicle going up
> and down steeply sloped rails.
>
> I'm in favor of tagging incl
On Fri, Dec 4, 2020, 6:30 PM Guillaume Chauvat wrote:
> Sorry for spamming.
>
> I also think it's fine if the Montmarte funicular is tagged as a
> funicular. But I'm asking because of things that are clearly elevators,
> like this one:
> https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-tekniska-hgskolan-metro-s
le
going up and down steeply sloped rails.
I'm in favor of tagging inclined elevators as funiculars whenever they
may resemble one. Perhaps an additional tag like
railway:funicular=inclined_elevator could be invented for those
interested in the technical details on how the
r all they know, they're just on a vehicle going up
and down steeply sloped rails.
I'm in favor of tagging inclined elevators as funiculars whenever they may
resemble one. Perhaps an additional tag like
railway:funicular=inclined_elevator could be invented for those interested
in the
My main issue with this is not technical details about how they work,
but about how they are used. They look like an elevator, act like one
and serve exactly the same purpose. You press a button, they come, the
doors open, you press a button inside to go up or down, etc.
They are used on relati
I've looked into these.
Most inclined elevators seem to also operate with cables, with the
difference being that in a funicular there are 2 cars attached to 1 cable,
so one ascends while the other descends, but in an inclined elevator each
car (or there might only be 1 car) is attached to a counte
On Fri, 4 Dec 2020 at 08:33, Guillaume Chauvat wrote:
> Yes, but this is a node, not a way. Inclined elevators require a way and
> those are not displayed properly.
>
Sorry, didn't get what you were getting at!
Graeme
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Yes, but this is a node, not a way. Inclined elevators require a way and those
are not displayed properly.
On 3 December 2020 23:05:14 CET, Graeme Fitzpatrick
wrote:
>On Thu, 3 Dec 2020 at 23:19, Guillaume Chauvat
>wrote:
>
>> I used a way tagged with highway=elevator as the wiki recommends, b
On Thu, 3 Dec 2020 at 23:19, Guillaume Chauvat wrote:
> I used a way tagged with highway=elevator as the wiki recommends, but this
> does not seem supported by any tool (the default editor, the map on
> openstreetmap.org, or osmand).
>
Highway=elevator renders on the main map eg
https://www.open
sent from a phone
> On 3. Dec 2020, at 16:53, 德泉 談 via Tagging wrote:
>
> I think the description in OSM wiki looks fine. Not supported by osm-carto
> and other tools needs to be reported by somebody, worth doing that.
+1, I would also think the wiki is fine, after all, a way seems the most
I'd taken both inclined elevator and funicular railway. I think it could seen
as two different kind of things.
Inclined elevators travel with short distance in most of the time, their
structure is quite different that it shouldn't be bracket with the other.
I think the description in OSM wiki l
It is supported by the wiki:
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:highway%3Delevator#How_to_Map_as_a_Way
There is an issue here, closed in 2016, "at least until a discussion on the
tagging list suggests otherwise."
https://github.com/gravitystorm/openstreetmap-carto/issues/1953
IMHO this is r
The one I am talking about is really an elevator. It's the one on the left in
the picture here:
http://nyttiflempan.sh.se/flemingsberg/2015-04-21/S%C3%B6dert%C3%B6rns-rulltrappa-en-huvudv%C3%A4rk-f%C3%B6r-kommunen-12389.html
Guillaume
On 3 December 2020 15:58:03 CET, Mateusz Konieczny via Taggi
Is it both something that makes sense, accepted by community
and supported by Wiki?
In such case, have you checked whatever this feature was already requested
for mentioned software?
It is both rare(?) and tricky to implement in rendering, but editors have
greater freedom to handle
this.
And i
This one looks to me like a small funicular railway.
But OSM Wiki includes "the ascending and descending vehicles counterbalancing
each other"
as one of important characteristic.
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:railway=funicular?uselang=en
Dec 3, 2020, 14:53 by winfi...@gmail.com:
> I
I couldn't resist looking them up.
This is a very long one and there is even an operator in it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wh0NxK6sslM
Most are the length of the escalators they are adjacent to.
Polyglot
On Thu, Dec 3, 2020 at 2:19 PM Guillaume Chauvat
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My apologies if th
Hi,
My apologies if this has already been discussed several times or if it's not
the place to ask.
I was mapping a public inclined elevator in a dedicated building (it only
contains the elevator and three parallel escalators). This is really a standard
elevator running parallel to the escalato
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