I’ve been a geography nerd for my entire life. Recently, I’ve gotten into OSM as part of my need to map bike lanes for an advocacy article on bike lanes.
Initially, I mapped manually using Mapbox studio. Yes, it was tedious.
A bit more research led to OSM. I checked ways to pull down bike lane tags. That led me to the world of OverpassQL, with Overpass Turbo and the Overpass API. Along the way, I also got a taste of tagging with the need to find bike related infrastructure. Apparently, all the tags here apply:
- bike=
- cycleway=
- cycleway_left=
- cycleway_right=
- cycleway_both=
Quite fun.
I managed to put my query together. Google Gemini search AI tried to be helpful with query suggestions. It was of limited accuracy.
After realizing that some infrastructure was missing, I had to consider maintenance of my underlying data. With OSM being an open source project, I decided to become a contributor.
The iD webapp was too limited for me. I’ve worked extensively with ArcMap before. JOSM was my tool of choice.
That leads me to today. I found additional bike maps (cycleOSM) that were nice but not illustrative enough. I also made my first updates to OSM. JOSM certainly has a learning curve but it’s mild.
I’ll still be making my own queries and I still plan to use Mapbox for my visualization. Will also have to test out Esri’s visual storytelling features.
More to come.
Discussion
Comment from Omnific on 28 September 2025 at 05:48
Welcome to OSM! Feel free to reach out with questions.