Hi,

FWIW I have developed an app (OpenTrail) which provides offline maps for UK 
walkers (actually only England for now) showing ROWs in the same colour scheme 
as Freemap, using Mapsforge. The designation tag is used to render the footpaths

It's not necessarily slick enough to be an "official" OSM UK app but could be 
used as a basis to develop something (by myself if necessary if someone had a 
list of requirements)

It's available at

http://www.free-map.org.uk/common/opentrail.html

and source
https://github.com/nickw1/Freemap

(the 0.1 version is older but more stable)

The big PITA at the moment is the need to generate MAP files from OSM data 
which I have to do annually however I am working on modifying mapsforge to 
optionally use a geojson web service instead, allowing dynamic updates on 
demand.

Nick


________________________________
From: Dudley Ibbett <dudleyibb...@hotmail.com>
Sent: 18 August 2015 21:16
To: Rob Nickerson; talk-gb@openstreetmap.org
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] Paths and Footways

Hi Rob

My approach is a pragmatic one.  I've come to the conclusion that it isn't 
reasonable to expect the "default" OSM website to render the "specialist" 
features that a UK walker would want.  The "gold standard" for UK walkers has 
to be the OS 1:25 so you would need contours, the British National Grid, public 
rights of way etc.    To be honest, even with these additional features we lack 
the basic data in many parts of the UK to provide the coverage needed for an 
alternative to the 1:25.  It does however appear that where the data is 
reasonable we are being used.  The following provides an example of a definite 
map overlay.   
http://www.derbyshire.gov.uk/leisure/countryside/access/rights_of_way/rights_of_way_network/default.asp#14/53.1728/-1.6869
   Presumably this is a vector overlay of the type being referred to and 
perhaps this could be one way forward.  I guess we could do something like this 
using the designation tag.

I believe the UK public right of way access is rather unique in the way it 
gives access through farmland, farmyards, residential properties etc.   I find 
it quite bizarre at times that you can end up walking through someone's garden 
quite legally.  I does potentially provide some unique rendering issues in the 
UK as a consequence.

In the field, most walkers will actually use an offline map and wouldn't want 
to rely on internet access and the OSM website.  I guess OSMand with a suitably 
rendered UK vector map would be the alternative.

Kind Regards

Dudley





________________________________
Date: Mon, 17 Aug 2015 23:25:35 +0100
From: rob.j.nicker...@gmail.com
To: talk-gb@openstreetmap.org
Subject: Re: [Talk-GB] Paths and Footways

Thanks Andy,

Fully aware of access land, undocumented rights of way and permissive paths. I 
just need to remember to be careful of what I write on this mailing list (but I 
was trying not to write an essay).

I'm surprised if this is just England and Wales as I would have thought some 
other country has some way of documenting paths in a legal context and as such 
this may be relevant for other countries, but the real question is: "would 
having some way to show the importance of particular paths/footways (just like 
roads have a classification) help, and if yes, how should we do this?"

So far there is little interest to do this on the OSM default render style 
which seems odd to me given how much fuss there has been on this list to recent 
changes to the footway/path style (over the last year)!

Rob

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