On Thu, 23 Jan 2020 at 22:51, Sebastian Spiess wrote:
> Hi,
>
> your case 1 appears to me like a parking lane. With or without cycle lane
> this is a common occurrence in most suburbs. I've asked about parking lanes
> some time ago.
>
The parking lane is separate though, it's not shared with
Hi,
your case 1 appears to me like a parking lane. With or without cycle
lane this is a common occurrence in most suburbs. I've asked about
parking lanes some time ago.
case 2 - what is the lane between the two continuous lines for?
case 3 - this is where I ask me at what width does a shoulder
On Tue, 21 Jan 2020 at 14:19, Sebastian S. wrote:
> Hi, what is the view of tagging road shoulders and particularly when they
> have painted bicycle signs?
>
> Motorways would be another candidate.
>
I've seen a few different scenarios.
- a dedicate cycle lane (only used as a cyclelane, not an
Hi,
Shoulders should always be tagged appropriately.
Shoulders legally in Australia can be used by all bicycles - whether or not
they have a bicycle stencil (painted bicycle sign) And a bicycle lane is
legally indicated by a sign and not a stencil. Legally the stencil has no
meaning at all.
If they have a painted bicycle lane, surely that would make it a bicycle lane,
rather than a shoulder?
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:cycleway#Cycle_lanes
On 21 January 2020 2:18:05 pm AEDT, "Sebastian S." wrote:
>Hi, what is the view of tagging road shoulders and particularly when
Hi, what is the view of tagging road shoulders and particularly when they have
painted bicycle signs?
Motorways would be another candidate.
A wiki entry for shoulder exists but is very basic
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:shoulder___
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