Hi All,
Just thought I would throw my 2cents in.  I am pretty new to OSM and have just 
recently started editing some roads in MN. In getting started I really 
struggled with tag roads and was mainly focusing on tagging them so they would 
display nice and label properly in the mapnik renderer.  In starting to get my 
feet wet I been looking into whether I could leverage the data in my web 
applications to create a road basemap.  I am on the fence on whether we can use 
it or not.  The biggest reason I have not jumped into using it at this point is 
because of the in ability to render nice consistent road labels (specifically 
highway and county road shields) like you see in Google and Bing maps.  If I 
could do this I would have jump right in and started using the OSM data, but 
the way it stands now would take a fair amount of work to revise tags to make a 
nice basemap.

I would not overlook the importance of users ultimately just wanting to use the 
data to easily make a nice road map that includes highway shields as labels.  
You all know way more about the history of the OSM data than me but I thought I 
would give you the perspective from an outside person looking and evaluating 
whether OSM data could be used as a replacement for a nice looking road 
basemap.  I'll be looking forward to seeing the final US roadway classification 
guidelines and will likely help me determine if OSM data is a good fit to 
renderer basemaps for my web applications.  I hope there is some considerations 
for rendering (specifically highway shields).

This is all very interesting discussions and I'm curious to see where it goes.

Brian Fischer, CFM  GIS Project Manager
Houston Engineering, Inc.
Phone: Direct: 763-493-6664 / W: 763.493.4522 / M: 763.229.2734


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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
      (McGuire, Matthew)
   2. Re: United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
      (Nathan Edgars II)
   3. Re: United States Roadway Classification Guidelines (Jim McAndrew)
   4. Re: United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
      (Brad Neuhauser)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 08:40:36 -0500
From: "McGuire, Matthew" <matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us>
To: 'Nathan Edgars II' <nerou...@gmail.com>
Cc: Anthony <o...@inbox.org>, Kevin Atkinson <ke...@atkinson.dhs.org>,
        Ian Dees <ian.d...@gmail.com>,  "talk-us@openstreetmap.org"
        <talk-us@openstreetmap.org>
Subject: Re: [Talk-us] United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
Message-ID:
        <b2534e15f9f8894ca64ba78781efc458b7ccd38...@exchmb1.mc.local>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

> Can you show me an area of the US that's tagged completely objectively?

For example: Interstate 99 near Altoona, PA is coded (AFAIK appropriately) a 
motorway. Over the entire length of the Interstate, it looks like it serves a 
max average daily traffic of 37,000 vehicles per day 
(http://www.interstate-guide.com/i-099.html), which is equivalent to many 
"primary" roads.

Given this volume, it is reasonable to imagine Interstate 99 was never built. 
Instead there is a four lane, at-grade highway. The road would still serve the 
same interregional travel purpose in the area network. It could have the same 
traffic volume. But it wouldn't be a motorway.

Interstate 99 doesn't share other qualities of Interstates (traffic volume, 
Interstate Travel, connecting large cities) Therefore, the current 
classification of motorway is based on the physical quality of the road.

I've also been on ridiculously under-designed two lane roads in the 
Philadelphia and other Northeastern suburbs that carry large loads of commuter 
traffic. They function as primary or secondary roads, but they aren't built 
like the ones in my area and should not be classified the same way. If they 
code it as such, it will only serve to alienate visitors.

This is the North Bethlehem Pike north of Philadelphia. 
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=12336821 It is coded as a primary road.

This is Bass Lake Road west of Minneapolis. 
http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=41442915 It is coded as secondary.

I'll let you dig up what the roads look like with whatever tools you're 
comfortable with. But the way it looks to me is that functionally, they are 
probably both accurate. Physically, the secondary road is a much more robust 
road.

These differences are reflective of regional differences, and I did not need to 
spend much time looking for them. If they are all coded by relative local 
function, we whitewash regional differences - the interesting (useful, if 
that's a requirement) bits to me.





------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 10:39:51 -0400
From: Nathan Edgars II <nerou...@gmail.com>
To: "McGuire, Matthew" <matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us>
Cc: Anthony <o...@inbox.org>, Kevin Atkinson <ke...@atkinson.dhs.org>,
        Ian Dees <ian.d...@gmail.com>,  "talk-us@openstreetmap.org"
        <talk-us@openstreetmap.org>
Subject: Re: [Talk-us] United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
Message-ID:
        <aanlktimq_xax3+xvslw1tdwr_mwbgujnmg1hvef2c...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 9:40 AM, McGuire, Matthew 
<matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us> wrote:
>> Can you show me an area of the US that's tagged completely objectively?
>
> For example: Interstate 99 near Altoona, PA is coded (AFAIK appropriately) a 
> motorway. Over the entire length of the Interstate, it looks like it serves a 
> max average daily traffic of 37,000 vehicles per day 
> (http://www.interstate-guide.com/i-099.html), which is equivalent to many 
> "primary" roads.
>
> Given this volume, it is reasonable to imagine Interstate 99 was never built. 
> Instead there is a four lane, at-grade highway. The road would still serve 
> the same interregional travel purpose in the area network. It could have the 
> same traffic volume. But it wouldn't be a motorway.
>
> Interstate 99 doesn't share other qualities of Interstates (traffic volume, 
> Interstate Travel, connecting large cities) Therefore, the current 
> classification of motorway is based on the physical quality of the road.

I know that motorway is based on physical characteristics. I'm asking for an 
area where every road is tagged objectively.



------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 11:04:09 -0400
From: Jim McAndrew <j...@loc8.us>
To: "McGuire, Matthew" <matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us>
Cc: Nathan Edgars II <nerou...@gmail.com>, Anthony <o...@inbox.org>,
        Kevin Atkinson <ke...@atkinson.dhs.org>, Ian Dees
        <ian.d...@gmail.com>,   "talk-us@openstreetmap.org"
        <talk-us@openstreetmap.org>
Subject: Re: [Talk-us] United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
Message-ID:
        <aanlktimlwmrod_mul9opgrthfv-ndhjozl4f5gmr3...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

As someone who has driven on these routes quite a number of times, I can say 
that PA roads are not up to the same standards as roads pretty much anywhere 
else in the country.  When roads come into the state from NJ, they all go from 
3-4 lanes down to two.  Which is fine for a rural highway, but not I-76 going 
through Philadelphia.  I think that as far as people living in those areas, 
they would believe their road to be a primary road, even if it is only a two 
lane road with a lot of stoplights. The terms "primary" and "secondary" are 
relative terms and they should be labeled as relative.  It would be interesting 
to add the traffic count data to the ways and possibly use that to display the 
width of the road.

As for the two Pennsylvania roads mentioned, there are my local perceptions on 
them:

I-99 is a special case where a congressman wanted a road to go from the PA 
turnpike to I-80, he threw a bunch of money at it, and made up a new number to 
assign to it.  The road never really was meant to be an interstate, and I think 
the state reluctantly accepted it being called an interstate only after the 
I-99 signs were put up.  It doesn't follow interstate conventions or anything.  
It is a limited access highway though, and the speed limit is
65 the whole way.  As a driver on the road, I wouldn't notice a difference 
between it and I-80.

As far as Bethlehem Pike, the road was largely replace by Route 309 and 378.  
It is a very old road and follows Native American trails.  In some areas, it 
still exists as an arterial road.  The road is not used for any long distance 
travel, because people traveling further would be using route 309.  Route 309 
and Bethlehem Pike are concurrent for much of the way through Montgomeryville, 
and further north at the bypass, there's a Bethlehem Pike and an Old Bethlehem 
Pike, showing the evolution of the roadway.  In any case, Bethlehem Pike near 
the southernmost bypass of route
309 would be a secondary road in my opinion, as anyone looking to travel for 
more than a few miles would travel on 309.

In contrast to that, there is a road called "Easton Road" which is labeled as 
route 611.  It probably matches Bethlehem Pike in robustness, but for 
travelers, there is no better alternate road to much of northern Bucks county, 
and it could be listed as a primary road through that region.

On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 9:40 AM, McGuire, Matthew < 
matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us> wrote:

> > Can you show me an area of the US that's tagged completely objectively?
>
> For example: Interstate 99 near Altoona, PA is coded (AFAIK
> appropriately) a motorway. Over the entire length of the Interstate,
> it looks like it serves a max average daily traffic of 37,000 vehicles
> per day ( http://www.interstate-guide.com/i-099.html), which is
> equivalent to many "primary" roads.
>
> Given this volume, it is reasonable to imagine Interstate 99 was never
> built. Instead there is a four lane, at-grade highway. The road would
> still serve the same interregional travel purpose in the area network.
> It could have the same traffic volume. But it wouldn't be a motorway.
>
> Interstate 99 doesn't share other qualities of Interstates (traffic
> volume, Interstate Travel, connecting large cities) Therefore, the
> current classification of motorway is based on the physical quality of the 
> road.
>
> I've also been on ridiculously under-designed two lane roads in the
> Philadelphia and other Northeastern suburbs that carry large loads of
> commuter traffic. They function as primary or secondary roads, but
> they aren't built like the ones in my area and should not be
> classified the same way. If they code it as such, it will only serve to 
> alienate visitors.
>
> This is the North Bethlehem Pike north of Philadelphia.
> http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=12336821 It is coded as a primary road.
>
> This is Bass Lake Road west of Minneapolis.
> http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=41442915 It is coded as secondary.
>
> I'll let you dig up what the roads look like with whatever tools
> you're comfortable with. But the way it looks to me is that
> functionally, they are probably both accurate. Physically, the
> secondary road is a much more robust road.
>
> These differences are reflective of regional differences, and I did
> not need to spend much time looking for them. If they are all coded by
> relative local function, we whitewash regional differences - the
> interesting (useful, if that's a requirement) bits to me.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Talk-us mailing list
> Talk-us@openstreetmap.org
> http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-us
>
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------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 10:29:54 -0500
From: Brad Neuhauser <brad.neuhau...@gmail.com>
To: "McGuire, Matthew" <matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us>
Cc: Nathan Edgars II <nerou...@gmail.com>, Anthony <o...@inbox.org>,
        Kevin Atkinson <ke...@atkinson.dhs.org>, Ian Dees
        <ian.d...@gmail.com>,   "talk-us@openstreetmap.org"
        <talk-us@openstreetmap.org>
Subject: Re: [Talk-us] United States Roadway Classification Guidelines
Message-ID:
        <aanlkti=ulmrg_t=xpoue+ljtclavzxmz_fjonpkwm...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Regarding Matthew's earlier point ("Agreed. There is no observation that will 
tell you whether a road is more important than another road that is not where 
you are. But you can identify physical characteristics. A lot of these 
observations will lead to a coherent
whole."):  it seems like if you take this to its logical conclusion, you're 
saying highways should just be tagged by physically observable characteristics, 
and rendering should go off that and drop the primary/secondary/tertiary etc?  
But I think *maybe* we can all agree that primary/secondary/tertiary are--or 
more accurately, could be :)--a convenient shorthand for entering/viewing roads 
data and for rendering.  It's a matter of what that shorthand is pointing to.
(plus, I personally have no interest in tagging lanes or speed limit on roads, 
but maybe others do?)

Which brings us to the objective v. subjective question. Does our shorthand 
point to an objective system that is always applied exactly the same way in all 
situations?  The more I've worked with OSM and data in general (especially at a 
statewide or national scale), the more I've come to the conclusion that it is 
hard to get one size to fit all.  I think if we could agree on a solution that 
is 95% perfect, 5% do-what-you-need-to-do-for-it-to-make-sense-in-your-area, 
that'd be good enough for now, and far better than the confusion engendered by 
conflicting schemes spread across the wiki.  Kevin's proposal seems to be 
headed in that direction.

Cheers, Brad

On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 8:40 AM, McGuire, Matthew 
<matt.mcgu...@metc.state.mn.us> wrote:
>> Can you show me an area of the US that's tagged completely objectively?
>
> For example: Interstate 99 near Altoona, PA is coded (AFAIK appropriately) a 
> motorway. Over the entire length of the Interstate, it looks like it serves a 
> max average daily traffic of 37,000 vehicles per day 
> (http://www.interstate-guide.com/i-099.html), which is equivalent to many 
> "primary" roads.
>
> Given this volume, it is reasonable to imagine Interstate 99 was never built. 
> Instead there is a four lane, at-grade highway. The road would still serve 
> the same interregional travel purpose in the area network. It could have the 
> same traffic volume. But it wouldn't be a motorway.
>
> Interstate 99 doesn't share other qualities of Interstates (traffic volume, 
> Interstate Travel, connecting large cities) Therefore, the current 
> classification of motorway is based on the physical quality of the road.
>
> I've also been on ridiculously under-designed two lane roads in the 
> Philadelphia and other Northeastern suburbs that carry large loads of 
> commuter traffic. They function as primary or secondary roads, but they 
> aren't built like the ones in my area and should not be classified the same 
> way. If they code it as such, it will only serve to alienate visitors.
>
> This is the North Bethlehem Pike north of Philadelphia. 
> http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=12336821 It is coded as a primary road.
>
> This is Bass Lake Road west of Minneapolis. 
> http://www.openstreetmap.org/?way=41442915 It is coded as secondary.
>
> I'll let you dig up what the roads look like with whatever tools you're 
> comfortable with. But the way it looks to me is that functionally, they are 
> probably both accurate. Physically, the secondary road is a much more robust 
> road.
>
> These differences are reflective of regional differences, and I did not need 
> to spend much time looking for them. If they are all coded by relative local 
> function, we whitewash regional differences - the interesting (useful, if 
> that's a requirement) bits to me.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Talk-us mailing list
> Talk-us@openstreetmap.org
> http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-us
>



------------------------------

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