On 08.11.2019 13:40, Philip Barnes wrote:
> Its not a shop, you don't buy anything there.
In my local case, the payment is done at collection time with any method the
main marked uses,
i.e. cash and card. Thus I'd call it a shop
> Maybe supermarket=customer_collect or customer_pickup. Collect fits my British English ears
better than pickup, that means something a bit different.
Indeed having 'collect' in the value sounds better than pick-up.
> They are covered, so the customer can drive in, so maybe borrow the drive_through tag from fast
food outlets.
> Not all are attached to the supermarket, others are a separate building in
the car park.
That layout sounds more like a loading point?
On 08.11.2019 16:02, Mateusz Konieczny wrote:
I encountered shop=outpost used for that
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:shop%3Doutpost
May be poor name - AFAIK it never went through a proposal process and appeared
in non-english
countries first, but is fairly popular.
I find "outpost" completely misleading (usage <500). An outpost is a small military position at some
distance from the main army, a remote part of a country, or an isolated branch of something (Oxford
dict). It has nothing to do with the collection of pre-ordered goods.
tom
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