What about a grassy field that is being used for industrial storage? For example, one small company here in Nashville has stacks of steel beams, several wheeled cranes, and the like stored on a grass-covered vacant lot next to their office and parking lot. From the way the grass is grown up around the wheels, some of the equipment hasn't been moved in years.
-------Original Email------- Subject :Re: [OSM-talk] New tool in Potlatch 2 for areas that share a way >From :mailto:[email protected] Date :Mon Jan 31 19:48:14 America/Chicago 2011 2011/2/1 Steve Bennett <[email protected]>: > I think a few of our tags aren't sufficiently well defined to be clear > about which is correct. For example, say a steel manufacturer owns a > large piece of land, at one end of which is a steel smelter. The rest > is grass. Is the whole land landuse=industrial? probably no. Landuse is describing the actual usage of the land. If there is only grass, it cannot be considered industrial, regardless of who owns the land. > Partly this gets back to the debate about whether a map is an abstract > representation, or whether it's essentially a 2D bitmap of the real > world. We can't do different then use abstraction. What you are thinking about is resolution IMHO. Every generalisation should be aware of the scale the map will be printed. As we are trying to create an universal database (i.e. there is no such thing as a fixed scale in OSM, although there is some scale limits like the precision in which we store the coordinates), the finer the data is structured, the more possible maps could be made out of it. cheers, Martin _______________________________________________ talk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk -- John F. Eldredge -- [email protected] "Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all." -- Hypatia of Alexandria _______________________________________________ talk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk

