OpenStreetMap logo OpenStreetMap

Changeset When Comment
167734212 6 months ago

The painted markings are a different, lower meaning (they imply "___ gestattet"). See the Swiss tagging guidelines for the correspondence between tags and signs: osm.wiki/Switzerland/Map_Features#Cycle_and_Foot_Ways

160429255 12 months ago

These particular sand-coloured FGSOs really were intended by the city as bike "infrastructure", specifically where they couldn't fit real bike lanes because the street was too narrow and it was a bus route so they couldn't make it one-way. See e.g. the article here: https://www.provelozuerich.ch/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/vj_regio_16_5_ZH.pdf (page 3).

That said, I see the point that this intent isn't very verifiable as FGSOs are used so randomly by communes.

160429255 12 months ago

According to the wiki, (cycleway=shared%20lane?uselang=en) cycleway=shared_lane is exactly for this type of legally-not-binding paint-on-road "infrastructure" that just reminds car divers bikes might exist. In the US it's used for "sharrows" which is where they just paint some bicycles on the right hand side of the road without any demarcation. Since the yellow stripes on these two roads _are_ supposed to be for bicycles AFAIK, but are clearly not bike lanes (neither legally not practically since they are too narrow), I thought this tagging was appropriate - it's a marking telling cyclists to share the main car lane.

> every Swiss street is allowed for bicycles by default anyway

Yes but not every Swiss street has a Tiefbauamt-painted indicator. This tag is for the indicator, not the access (that would be bicycle=yes, which nobody tags on roads because as you said it's the default).

> Tagging it as such would make it look "cycle friendly", which it's definitely not.

It exists on the ground, so there must be some way of tagging it. We shouldn't not tag things that exist in reality because we don't like those things...

I don't feel that strongly about, though, it if you think it should be reverted.

158733590 about 1 year ago

I recently tagged the Stadt Zürich Velovorzugsrouten (e.g. relation/18164970) for similar reasons :)

I think the state tag on OSM has a slightly different meaning to what the canton's dataset might say: something in the default state on OSM is supposed to be findable on the ground. So for a route, that means you should be able to find _some_ route wayfinding signs/paint/etc. But at least in some of these cases, there really is no bicycle wayfinding at all, as far as I can recall from my last ride through.

Although one shouldn't map for the renderer, for what it's worth both CyclOSM and OpenCycleMap render state=proposed cycle routes, just with dashed rendering. Which IMO is appropriate: a user might be rudely surprised if they see a route on the map, assume they can follow it, and then find it not signed in real life.

There is one annoying thing, which is routes can only have one state value for the whole route. You can't mark just the sections that are not signed, for example. For the VVR I decided to err on the side of caution and tag them as state=proposed if they had significant portions not signed. The lcn=yes tagging on ways is in this respect more flexible.

158733590 about 1 year ago

Some of these bike routes are not signed at all (e.g. relation/18248732), and therefore probably don't meet the OSM criteria for verifiability. In particular the reference numbers should be at most unsigned_ref=*, not ref=*, since they aren't signed anywhere. Also, perhaps the routes themselves should have state=proposed until/unless they get signage.

140171060 over 1 year ago

> Looking at the other signage along Bahnhofstrasse, I think one might be supposed to go on the sidewalk, but not on the street?

No, there would need to be a blue pedestrian sign with a white "Velos gestattet" subsign on the footpath for this to be the case. Otherwise the law is that all footpaths within 2m of a road are strictly for pedestrians, and bikes should ride on the road. For paths further away from the road or not parallel to a road, they are usually signed as roads with motor traffic banned, in which case bikes are allowed; or as roads with all traffic banned, in which case they aren't.

140171060 over 1 year ago

Your panoramax photo is consistent with that, since it uses "no entry" instead of "no vehicles", which is only used in Switzerland for one-way roads.

140171060 over 1 year ago

I believe the allowance is only for northbound traffic, which is why you didnt see any signs coming from the north. But as the road is tagged oneway=yes here, the prior tagging should have been correct and already implied no access from the north.

140171060 over 1 year ago

This edit (and the one I made immediately before it) are based on changed published on the city website, where they announced the loosening of the restrictions on this section of Bahnhofstrasse: https://www.stadt-zuerich.ch/site/velo/de/index/erfolgreich-umgesetzt.html (and search for "Bahnhofstrasse (2. Massnahme)"). There is a chance I implemented the described change incorrectly, though. A picture of the sign is on the webpage.

123493591 over 3 years ago

Hi, this edit was just wrong. The Langstrasse tunnel has bike lanes now. Please don't answer questions in StreetComplete without visiting in person and checking the current state.

101726480 over 3 years ago

Having skimmed the thread you started, I agree that the specific tagging of restriction:bicycle=give_way is pretty bad, and would welcome something better. But I agree with the person who said this: "Main problem here, is that while I dislike relations it may be tricky to guess to which road this red turn right applies, maybe relation may be needed
for a full clarity." They are right that in general it's often unclear which way(s) are the ones for which the traffic light can be ignored, especially since in fully-tagged intersections, the traffic_signals node comes before the intersection of the ways.

101726480 over 3 years ago

The one with `restriction:bicycle=yes` is a mistake; it should be `restriction:bicycle=give_way`, thanks for catching that.

There are at least 3 tagging schemes that in parallel use for tagging right-on-red for bikes. I've been tagging both with the point-based scheme you mentioned (`red_turn:bicycle=yes`) and with this relation-based scheme that seems popular mostly in France (see osm.wiki/FR:Signalisation_routi%C3%A8re_en_France#Panonceaux_de_type_M, https://taginfo.openstreetmap.org/tags/restriction%3Abicycle=give_way#map), because the CyclOSM map renders the latter. It also should in theory be easier for routers because it actually specifies the from and to ways, whereas the point-based tagging scheme is a bit ambiguous.

117066392 almost 4 years ago

How did you decide there were no cycle lanes on Baslerstrasse (way #699662519)? They were there on the ground when I was last there in Autumn, even though they aren't in the aerial imagery.

108972734 over 4 years ago

Pretty sure these are not cycleways (as far as I can tell, there are no blue signs as required per osm.wiki/Switzerland/Map_Features#Cycle_and_Foot_Ways). However I only checked on Zürcherstrasse as that's the only road with Mapillary.

When this is the case, the ways should be tagged as highway=footway footway=sidewalk if they are close (< ~2m) to a road (i.e. legally a "Trottoir") or highway=path otherwise.

107170180 over 4 years ago

Instead of adding new ways that overlap existing ways, you should just add the golf-related tags to the existing ways. Separate ways should only exist if the cart path is physically separated from the track/service road, but in this case it is not.

101272420 over 4 years ago

Ja, ich bin fast einverstanden. Aber finde ich dieses red_turn-Tagging auf Punkte ungenügend, weil es unklar ist, auf welches Way das freie Rechtsabbeigen gemacht werden kann. Die restriction-Relation zeichnet sich hier aus und ist sehr klar - from, via, to.

Ich entferne gleich das traffic_signals:turn:bicycle:forward.

101272420 over 4 years ago

red_turn Tagging ist in #101327539 gekommen

101272420 over 4 years ago

Ich habe es hier gefunden: osm.wiki/Proposed_features/turn_signals. Es gibt auch häufig eine Relation restriction:bicycle=give_way (besonders in Frankreich).

Alle drei Taggings sind kaum gebraucht, also habe ich alle getaggt. Sie stehen nicht in Konflikt miteinander: dieses wird auf Ways getaggt, red_turn:right:bicycle auf Punkte und restriction:bicycle=give_way als Relation.

89480866 over 5 years ago

FYI, some of the edits in this changeset are quite wrong, e.g. surface=asphalt on a gravel road (e.g. way/124916624). This in particular is very hard to see from aerial imagery, you should avoid tagging it without either street-level imagery or on-the-ground experience. Also on this way, you reclassified it from track to unclassified, but track is probably more appropriate here. Unclassified is used more for roads linking villages, not for roads that only tractors and non-motor traffic use.

Also, it isn't generally helpful to add obvious defaults like salt=no on a creek (e.g. way/719455933). You should only tag it if someone might reasonably think it was not the default.

88264504 over 5 years ago

Thanks for your restoration. I would propose these further changes, would you mind taking a look and see if we agree or not? Summary:

* bridge footpaths have bicycle=designated (implied by SSV 2.63.1)
* bridge road has bicycle=use_sidepath (implied by SSV 2.63.1)
* traffic signals for the transition bicycle paths (otherwise it's possible to route through the intersection on bike without hitting any traffic_signal). Alternatively, the transition ways could be moved to meet the road just before the traffic signal nodes?
* split Selnaustr. eastbound to end the bike lane exactly where it ends, i.e. the pedestrian crossing
* split Selnaustr. westbound to start bike lane exactly where it starts, i.e. from Am Schanzengraben.

osmChange file: https://filebin.net/gicggiatr9wn6jcm/changes.osc?t=ldz2y594