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Two year ago the community in agreement with the local Highways Department agreed to close a street to through traffic. Postcode CW11 1GN. 1st part of the street is public highway and a made up road, 2nd part is privately owned, and a dirt track. The high volume of traffic over the dirt track had made it impassable for motor vehicles to pass as huge crators had developed. Successfully changed Google and TomTom maps only to find open street maps also needed to be changed.

So far I have Split Bradwall street ( 24441448/1168954855) shortend 1168954855 and added Bradwall Street Track ( 1168932723 ) and added a gate ( Way 1168929181, change set 135734602 )which is not open to vehicles on the track. Pedestrians and cyclists can pass around the gate but motor vehicles cannot get passed, No Entry signs also installed along with T dead end signs at each junction with the main road.

However if I ask how to get to a house on Bradwall St from the northern part of town the directions are telling me to turn into the track which is now blocked by a gate -

Can someone review what I've done and advise on how to correct the setup. Thanks John

asked 07 May '23, 00:19

JohnKeane's gravatar image

JohnKeane
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edited 07 May '23, 00:28

Even if unpaved and private I think this sounds like it is still a highway=residential road. You might want to tag it as having general access=destination, leaving the permissive food and cyclist tagging.

(07 May '23, 17:04) InsertUser

My suggestion would be to make the gate a node on the highway. Thus a physical barrier/restriction on the highway rather than a way drawn across the highway but not part of the highway. You would have to reconsider the tags on the highway and gate making them logically possible, (not locked and open 24/7).

Regards

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answered 07 May '23, 06:56

BCNorwich's gravatar image

BCNorwich
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accept rate: 20%

2

Just to add a note, even a barrier mapped as a way should normally share a node with the road it crosses to indicate the connection.

(07 May '23, 17:08) InsertUser

Hi.

You probably want to read the barrier page on the osm wiki, it's well explained (about the node vs way approach). Sub-tags are interesting too.

Please check the access page. For example, the access=no tag on the "track" means it's forbidden for all.

On a side note, you shouldn't add "Track" in the name of the track part of the street, it should be inferred from the highway tag.

Speaking of which, pedestrian is usually meant for streets in cities.

Here I think I would tag as highway=track with smoothness=horrible or something like that.

Please tell if you need more advice.

Best regards.

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answered 07 May '23, 13:31

H_mlet's gravatar image

H_mlet
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accept rate: 13%

It seems that OSRM open source routing machine works now but Graphhopper does not yet. https://www.openstreetmap.org/directions?engine=fossgis_osrm_car&route=53.14869%2C-2.36608%3B53.14815%2C-2.36708#map=17/53.14794/-2.36569 Note although edits to OSM are instant the routers only seem to update their info from OSM every few days this could explain the delay...maybe?

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answered 08 May '23, 11:05

andy%20mackey's gravatar image

andy mackey
13.2k87143285
accept rate: 4%

edited 08 May '23, 11:10

Thanks for the feedback, it would appear that the routing engines may take some time to gain access to the changes, thanks Andy_Mackey.

Considering the comments about the approach I have taken I'll do some more research before making any further changes, but further feedback is welcome. Key items to consider i) the 1st 200 meters of the roadway is public highway and maintained by the local authority ii) at the end of the tarmac road and pavement there is a privately owned track 70 meters in length, it is not permissable for the public to drive a vehicle along but it is open to the public to walk or cycle along it ( it is because the ownership and permissions of the highway and track are different that I split what had originally been mapped as a single unit into two ) iii) There is a gate across the track, permanently closed and locked to prevent vehicles from ignoring the access restriction, drivers are forced to turn around and retrace their steps

If I have been in the vicinity when vehicles ( usually delivery drivers using iPhones ) approach the barrier and have to then turn around I have been asking them what routing tool they have been using, so I will monitor this over the next few weeks and check if the change is effective across the various Apps.

One question I have is what is the typical timescale for a change like this to update onto remote devices ? I know TomTom was 3 months before the update was available.

(08 May '23, 13:19) JohnKeane

@JohnKeane The update frequency for devices is entirely up to the individual app maker. Changes go live in the database immediately, with diffs to the planet file published for use minutely if consumers so desire. Routing normally takes a fair amount of processing to convert OSM data into a usable format, which is probably why I'm not aware of a router that updates nearly this quickly. Apps that work offline might update once a month, online routers (especially speciality ones) may be quicker or may only update at a pace that their clients demand.

(08 May '23, 14:35) InsertUser

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question asked: 07 May '23, 00:19

question was seen: 1,794 times

last updated: 08 May '23, 14:35

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