On Wed, 19 Aug 2009 15:01:24 +0100 (BST), Steve Hill <[email protected]> wrote: > On Wed, 19 Aug 2009, Peter Körner wrote: > >>> What's left to be clarified is how lanes are numbered. >>> >> >> I'd suggest to be the inner one to be 1, ascending the more you're going >> to >> the border > > The police tend to number them with lane 1 being closest to the footway > (i.e. the left lane in the UK, the right lane over much of the rest of the > world). Although there could be something to be said for making it > region-agnostic so that satnavs don't have to know what side of the road > you drive in a specific region. In Brazil, where lane numbers have been signed (at least where I have seen such signs), the numbering follows the direction you read, i.e. from left to right. Left most lane is 1, and rightmost lane is n. For example when leaving Vitoria, passing the bus station the road is 8 lane for a short bit, with signs saying "lane 1, 2 to 5th bridge, lane 3, 4 to bus station and return to centro, lane 5, 6 to 1st bridge, lane 7, 8 to some suburb". Maybe lane numbering is country specific, I don't know.
-- Brgds Aun Johnsen via Webmail _______________________________________________ talk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk

