I believe there was a recent discussion on showgrounds and temporal events.
"temporal" as opposed to "temporary" as in "happens regularly every
week/month/year for a set period of time at the same location". Up until
recently, OSM has been strongly against temporal objects, but German
Christmas
On 15/7/20 5:07 pm, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
sent from a phone
On 15. Jul 2020, at 00:49, Justin Tracey wrote:
If the festival is held at some date expressible using the opening
hours syntax, you could use the "open hours" tag[0] or add conditions
to the "access" tags
I would not
sent from a phone
> On 15. Jul 2020, at 00:49, Justin Tracey wrote:
>
> If the festival is held at some date expressible using the opening hours
> syntax, you could use the "open hours" tag[0] or add conditions to the
> "access" tags
I would not use opening_hours tag to represent the
On Tue, Jul 14, 2020 at 11:23 AM John Sturdy wrote:
> I've been adding some detail to a site that is used annually for a
> festival (not happening this year because of Covid-19), where there are
> paths in the same place year after year, but the paths are not there when
> the festival is not
I too would suggest opening_hours.
Seasonal is related to the climate and the climate does vary from one
year to the next and may be why the tag has a 'loose description'. An
annual festival is not usually held for an entire climatic season, so I
would not use it for them. Similar argument
If the festival is held at some date expressible using the opening hours
syntax, you could use the "open hours" tag[0] or add conditions to the
"access" tags[1]. Though these tend to represent temporary
accessibility, not temporary existence the way "intermittent" or
"seasonal"[2] do. I'll also
I've been adding some detail to a site that is used annually for a festival
(not happening this year because of Covid-19), where there are paths in the
same place year after year, but the paths are not there when the festival
is not happening, although increased wear on the ground around them is