OpenStreetMap logo OpenStreetMap

Changeset When Comment
136071648

Hi, can you tell us a little more about this edit that changed Wychwood Park roadways from access=permissive to access=private?

access=private means that individual permission is always required to enter, for everyone.

A "private road" or "private property" might not necessarily be access=private. It was previously tagged access=permissive which means "Open to general traffic until such time as the owner revokes the permission which they are legally allowed to do at any time in the future."

In note/4350769 there is a report that it's signed as private property, but access is not prohibited.

Could you comment here or on the note linked?

Thanks,
--Jarek

155375493

Hi,

Sorry for delay replying here.

I can agree that highway=path is a little problematic.

One issue is that there isn't a widely-accepted definition of what a path actually is, and there's a lot of discussion in the community right now. Some examples:
- https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/pathway-for-ways-not-used-by-or-intended-for-cars/118981
- https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/documenting-the-problems-with-highway-path/119103
- https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/history-of-proposals-to-fix-highway-path-ambiguity-and-a-wayforward/118877
- https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/documenting-solution-proposals-for-highway-path/119773

So for this case I think the problem we're seeing is that this is what we could call "a wide pathway" but there's no agreement on whether it's a highway=path

In Canadian terms, its built form is similar to a multi-use path or a shared-use path. Some of these are indeed wide enough for a car to drive on. There's no general agreement on how to tag those. Some that are primarily used by cyclists get by with highway=cycleway and possibly foot=yes, for example the trail over the Humber bridge way/33398082 or the Humber River Trail way/873348032

In this case I don't think it should be a cycleway, because cyclists aren't really the primary or usually not even half of the users (partly due to hills, partly due to frequent crowding with pedestrians).

But what I don't like here is a highway=service tag. I read that tag as a car-focused tag, or at least car-first. To me, highway=service are laneways leading to garages, or in High Park, the service roadway leading to the greenhouses way/14345156 - it's not really where you'd walk as recreation.

What do you think about tagging this path as highway=footway? It would align with its primary use. We could tag width=* to indicate the size. Alternatively, for "more substantial" foot paths, there's highway=pedestrian - and that's used on Spring Road and Deer Pen Road within High Park - so it could be an option here too.

For the path along the bottom of the pond, along The Queensway, I would actually suggest highway=cycleway? It's similar in practice to the ravine/river trails or the Humber bridge.

Cheers,
Jarek

159595899

Cool, thanks! Just as a heads up, I tweaked the note on the stops in changeset/159749749 and marked some more stops as disused

158682620

Hello,

In addition to my previous comments about the PXO, I have one more:

You tagged tactile_paving=yes on crossings like node/12308510874 (Barondale and Cortina east leg) and node/12308510868 (west leg). Those crossings don't have tactile paving. I was checking my photos from walking along here in mid-October and they look like this: https://imgur.com/a/akXCsxs - the curb is indeed lowered, but there is no tactile paving at all.

Can you check what you tagged the tactile paving based on, and make corrections accordingly?

Thanks,
--Jarek

159595899

Hey, thanks for updating the relation! One problem though - the 501 goes on Church Street, not Victoria Street - both ways.

158984250

Hey, thanks for fixing up these super old unsplit sidewalks!

FYI, the "zebra" markings used in Toronto are actually called "ladder" in OSM.

OSM's "zebra" doesn't have the thin lines perpendicular to the thick stripes, "ladder" does.

Check them crossing:markings=*

158682620

This edit wrongly deleted a PXO I mapped, please see discussion in changeset/158682128

158682128

Sorry, the deleted crosswalk was actually in changeset/158682620 - another of your edits in the area

158682128

Hello,

In this edit you deleted a crosswalk with flashing lights (PXO) at Barondale and west side of Whistler Crescent: node/12255805575/history . I added it in changeset/157977678 having seen it in in-person survey. I would ask that you do not delete data in areas you are not familiar with, and check OSM history if unsure.

156706677

Hey PcMouse1,

Looking at this change to Sherbourne Street again - you drew in the bike track, but didn't change cycleway tagging on the highway=tertiary (so now two bike tracks are showing, one on the road and one cycleway), didn't update the local cycle network relation, and didn't give the cycle tracks a name. I think these are pretty important to make this useful for data consumers. Would you do it?

Cheers,
Jarek

156706677

Sorry, what I meant is I want the instruction to be "turn right onto Sherbourne Street cycle track" rather than "turn right onto unnamed cycle track". When I'm reading or listening to the instructions I want the name of the street because that tells me the street name sign to watch for when I'm riding.

156706677

Hey there,

If you add the bike lanes/tracks as separate ways, can you please assign name=Sherbourne Street? That way the name will be displayed in text routing instructions -- "turn right onto Sherbourne Street" rather than only "turn right onto cycle track".

Thanks!

158059619

(source is survey today)

155992289

Hey Andrew, it looks like this change replaced all crossing=marked with crossing=uncontrolled? It led to some bad results, like way/124486669 being tagged as crossing=uncontrolled even though it's a traffic light crosswalk. Can you fix these manually or should we undo the whole change? 6000 ways seems a lot to check manually...

155375493

Sorry I'm not sure I understand.

The Google image is not that clear, but from memory I think that sign says something like "no vehicles except authorized"?

Do you think that any piece of pavement in a Toronto park that has a sign "no vehicles except authorized" should be a highway=service? Because that's going to include a _lot_ of ways that are in practice overwhelmingly used by pedestrians.

155375493

Hi,

Can you point to what exactly on the wiki you read that made you believe this should be a highway=service?

My gut feeling is that paths should be tagged according to their prevalent use, and the small trackless train running on it April to October doesn't necessarily make it not a path. As another example, city parks dept vehicles (including pickup trucks) regularly drive on park paths or on Martin Goodman Trail. But I'd like to make sure I'm not completely off-base here.

Cheers,
Jarek

132507259

this one was also not fake, re-fixed it

132509418

for the record, this turbine _was_ real, but was removed around 2018

132507050

hey, FYI I re-added this wind turbine and added details - it's not fake node/1884714324/history

157359359

(Survey incomplete here because it was getting dark and a bunch of house numbers were quite hard to see)