NOTICE: help.openstreetmap.org is no longer in use from 1st March 2024. Please use the OpenStreetMap Community Forum

Hi, I mappeed this area: https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/292699788 But I can't make it visible. What am I doing wrong?

TIA

Cheers, MarcoA

asked 14 Jul '14, 11:58

marcoalici's gravatar image

marcoalici
11112
accept rate: 0%


The use of the area needs to be designated, you've just defined an area without defining it's purpose. Could it be landuse=residential? The area tag would then be redundant and should be removed. I think the name of the area ought to be capitalised as well. Regards

permanent link

answered 14 Jul '14, 13:03

BCNorwich's gravatar image

BCNorwich
6.3k54489
accept rate: 20%

1

landuse=residential worked! Thank you!

(14 Jul '14, 14:31) marcoalici
3

Be careful : replacing "area=yes" by "landuse=residential" will fix your rendering issue. But is it semantically correct ? Is "Castello" the name of a residential area or the name of a building block being an historic castle ?

(14 Jul '14, 15:35) Pieren

Your italian area is a closed way tagged with "area=yes" + "name=castello" which means "castle" in English. Based on Bing aerial imagery, your polygon seems to be the outer line of an historic castle. It this is the case, you just have to tag it with "building=yes" (or building=castle) + "historic=castle" + "name=Castello".
But if you do this, you will see a huge single block where in reality, there is a courtyard inside. To fix this, you will have to create a multipolygon relation with your "area" as outer ring and a new closed way representing the courtyard added in the relation with an "inner" role. Then, if you wish, you can move all tags from the outer ring (your current "area") to the multipolygon relation ("building" + "historic" + "name").

And with these tags, you don't need an "area=yes" tag because it is always the case for buildings. Basically, the tag "area=yes" is mainly used for "highway's" on closed ways only to determine if it's representing a loop (like a race track) or an uniform surface/area (area=yes).

permanent link

answered 14 Jul '14, 13:14

Pieren's gravatar image

Pieren
9.8k2083157
accept rate: 15%

edited 14 Jul '14, 13:28

2

(in case it wasn't obvious) I'm guessing that the "area=yes" tag was added by the iD editor and not chosen by the mapper here.

But yes; as Pieren says you need to map things as something; just giving an unidentified feature a name doesn't work. Unfortunately this is something that the iD editor UI doesn't really make clear.

(14 Jul '14, 13:19) SomeoneElse ♦
Your answer
toggle preview

Follow this question

By Email:

Once you sign in you will be able to subscribe for any updates here

By RSS:

Answers

Answers and Comments

Markdown Basics

  • *italic* or _italic_
  • **bold** or __bold__
  • link:[text](http://url.com/ "title")
  • image?![alt text](/path/img.jpg "title")
  • numbered list: 1. Foo 2. Bar
  • to add a line break simply add two spaces to where you would like the new line to be.
  • basic HTML tags are also supported

Question tags:

×213
×2

question asked: 14 Jul '14, 11:58

question was seen: 2,584 times

last updated: 14 Jul '14, 15:35

NOTICE: help.openstreetmap.org is no longer in use from 1st March 2024. Please use the OpenStreetMap Community Forum