Key:cycleway

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Public-images-osm logo.svg cycleway
Dsc01078 clip.jpg
Description
Determines whether there are or what kind of cycle lanes or tracks provided within the carriageway or next to it. Show/edit corresponding data item.
Group: cycleways
Used on these elements
may be used on nodesmay be used on waysshould not be used on areasshould not be used on relations (except multipolygon relations)
Documented values: 18
Requires
Implies
Useful combination
See also
Status: de facto

The cycleway=* tagging is used on way linear features tagged with highway=* to map cycling infrastructure that is an inherent part of the road. This specifically applies to:

  • cycle lanes which are part of the road without any physical separation from the other lanes except the painting on the road (don't map them as separate ways),
  • cycle tracks that are running parallel and next to the road (consider map them as separate ways with highway=cycleway, or highway=path + bicycle=designated in case of shared foot- and bicycle ways).

If no cycling infrastructure is present, you should indicate this by using the value no (see below).

cycleway=asl for advanced stop lines is the only case in which the key cycleway=* is used on node nodes instead of way way features.

For bicycle roads/cycle streets where the full carriageway may be used primarily by bicycles, see bicycle_road=yes and cyclestreet=yes.

See also the Bicycle page for a number of illustrated examples on how to map specific cycling infrastructure situations.

Using side attributes

Main article: Forward & backward, left & right

It is advisable to use cycleway tags in combination with side attributes, i.e. cycleway:left=*, cycleway:right=* or cycleway:both=* (instead of a simple cycleway=*). This clearly indicates which side of the road an infrastructure specification refers to. The terms "right" and "left" are relative to the direction in which the way was drawn in the editor, and not necessarily the direction of real-world travel. (In the iD editor, for example, the direction is indicated by arrows at the mid-point of each segment of the way.)

It is assumed that cycle traffic is allowed to flow in the customary direction for traffic on that side of the road (which, for oneway=yes roads, is the same on both sides and in agreement with the motorised traffic) – unless otherwise specified by oneway=* tags (e.g. cycleway:right:oneway=no or cycleway:left:oneway=-1, see also the chapter on #Bicycle infrastructure in one-way roads below).

Common values

Cycleway

To describe infrastructure designed mainly for cyclists. See also: Cycle routes.

Value Element Comment Photo

Dedicated bicycle lanes

lane way A bicycle lane is an inherent part of the road itself. It has no physical separation from the other lanes except the painting on the road. In North America, known as a class II bicycle facility. Notably, there is no curb between the cycle lane and the road.

Some countries have two different types of cycle lanes:

  • one with a strict segregation that is reserved exclusively to cyclists and
  • one with a soft segregation, usually a dashed line.

To distinguish between these two types of cycle lanes, the cycle lane can additionally be tagged with cycleway:lane=exclusive or cycleway:lane=advisory respectively.

Cycle lane, Ormeau Embankment, Belfast (August 2014) - geograph.org.uk - 4129897.jpg

Shared bicycle lanes

shared_lane way Cyclists share a lane with motor vehicles, and there are markings (like  sharrows) indicating that motorists and cyclists should share this lane.

The road markings are usually there to highlight a cycle route or to remind drivers that you can cycle there.

Picto corridor Praha Vršovická.jpg
share_busway way A special lane reserved for public transport on which cyclists are also allowed to bike.
Bus lane Paris 2014.JPG

Bicycle tracks

track way A cycle track is separated from the road by curbs, parking lots, grass verges, trees, bollards or another physical barrier, but is running parallel and next to the road. In North America this is called a protected bike lane, separated bike lane, greenway, green lane, or class IV facility.[1]

Alternatively, consider mapping cycle tracks as a separate way next to the road tagged as highway=cycleway (or highway=path + bicycle=designated in case of shared foot- and bicycle ways). Both methods each have their pros and cons: While adding a single tag to an existing way takes less time and still often describes the cycle track accurately, a separately tagged cycle way is generally more flexible and allows to capture more detail (note here that higher complexity increases the potential for routing errors). Add cycleway=separate to the highway if a cycle track is mapped separately (see below).

In the USA, general practice is to use this tag when the bike lane is protected by parking with or without bollards/flex posts. E.g. the parking lane is between the vehicle travel lane and the bike lane. Where the bike lane is bi-directional and protected by bollards, general practice has been to draw this bike lane as a separate way even if it is not vertically separated from the vehicle travel lanes.

Fietspad PeeWee32.jpg
separate way Should be used to indicate that a cycle track associated with a highway has been mapped as a separate OSM element (i.e., is tagged with highway=cycleway). Meaning is similar to the use of sidewalk=separate for footways, and can potentially be used when simplifying geometries for rendering. It also acts as a hint to avoid duplicating an existing cycleway by adding cycleway=track to a highway. Don't confuse with segregated=yes.

No bicycle infrastructure

no way Explicitly marks that a street has no bicycle infrastructure. This allows to explicitly note that the road was surveyed for bicycle infrastructure.
Cyclist on Buncrana Road - geograph.org.uk - 5683688.jpg

Other bicycle infrastructure

crossing way Used on separately mapped paths to indicate that it's a bicycle crossing.
Cyclist crossing on Dunhua South Road, Taipei City 20080805.jpg
shoulder way Used to indicate that a road has no designated infrastructure for cyclists, but shoulders (a.k.a. breakdown lanes) are navigable and legal to cycle on. Especially on rural roads with high speed limits, the existence of a shoulder usable by cyclists can make the difference whether the road is usable at all (semi-)safely for cyclists. Not every shoulder=* is automatically usable for cyclists: Some shoulders are used for parking (parking=shoulder) instead, not all shoulders are paved (with asphalt, e.g. grass pavers). Additionally, shoulder=yes is typically only mapped for shoulders that are broad enough to accommodate a car. For cyclists however, a less wide shoulder is fine, too.
SkHwy11ShoulderBumps.jpg
link way A connector between OSM segments for cycle traffic, for example to connect a separately mapped cycle path to a junction on the opposite side. Serves primarily as a routing aid and does not necessarily have to be identifiable as built infrastructure.
Cycleway link.jpg
traffic_island way Used on the parts of refugee islands of a cycleway=crossing.
asl node Indicates an advanced stop line or bike box at junctions. Use cycleway=asl on a node node forming part of the road's way, located at the position of the secondary stop line. Consider adding direction=forward or direction=backward for an explicitly reference to the closest junction that a ASL relates to and thus the direction of traffic that it applies to.
Cyclist advanced stop line Liverpool.jpg

Deprecated or discouraged tags

opposite

opposite_lane
opposite_share_busway
opposite_track

Formerly used in one-way roads before oneway:bicycle=* was used. See below how to map bicycle infrastructure in one-way roads.
shared Formerly used on cycleways which were mapped as separate ways tagged as highway=cycleway before the segregated=* tag was formalized. Its use with highway=cycleway is now considered obsolete.

This table is a wiki template with a default description in English. Editable here.


Bicycle infrastructure in one-way roads

Contraflow cycle lane in a one-way road:
oneway=yes
+ oneway:bicycle=no
+ cycleway:right=no
+ cycleway:left=lane
+ cycleway:left:oneway=-1

Add oneway:bicycle=no on one-way roads that are open to bicycle traffic in the opposite direction.

In addition, the cycleway tags are used as usual to specify the bicycle infrastructure on each side of the road, seen in direction of the OSM way element (e.g. cycleway:both=no or cycleway:left=lane). For cycle paths in one-way streets, it is especially recommended to provide cycleway tags with side information so that there is no confusion as to which side (and therefore in which direction of travel) a cycle path is available. Therefore, use cycleway:right=*, cycleway:left=* and cycleway:both=* to ensure that this information is always provided.

If a cycle path is a contraflow bicycle way, i.e. runs in the opposite direction to the one-way street, it is necessary to explicitly specify a direction of travel for this cycle path that differs from the general direction of travel (e.g. cycleway:left:oneway=-1). This is necessary since otherwise it is generally assumed that cycle traffic is allowed to flow in the customary direction for traffic on the specified side of the road, which is the same on both sides for one-way roads. See cycleway:oneway=* for details and examples on how to correctly use oneway tags for cycle lanes and tracks in one-way roads.

Per-lane

In rare cases where cycleway=* isn't sufficient even with a direction suffix (e.g. because the cycle lanes is located between two motor lanes), cycleway:lanes=* is used instead. Others go further and specify the access on a per-lane bases with bicycle:lanes=* and access:lanes=* (with or without cycleway:lanes=*).

Some mappers also use this mapping in cases where cycleway:left/both/right=* is sufficient.

Buffered and protected bicycle ways

A buffered cycle lane is separated from the car lanes with extra space. This is still tagged as cycleway=lane but with cycleway:buffer=* added. For more specific tagging, the cycleway:left:buffer=*, cycleway:right:buffer=*, or cycleway:both:buffer=* variants can also be used.

Cycle paths that are physically separated/protected from moving traffic (e.g. by bollards, flower pots or even a row of parked vehicles) are usually understood as cycle track. To indicate the type of physical separation, there is the proposed cycleway:separation=* tagging.

Buffered bicycle lane providing extra space between bicycle and motorized traffic (see cycleway:buffer=*).
Protected cycle track, additionally separated from the flow of traffic by bollards (see cycleway:separation=*).

Supplementary details

If tracks or lanes for bicycles are tagged on a highway, the prefix cycleway: can be used as a namespace for other tags. This has the meaning of limiting the details to just the cycleway. Additionally the namespace can be combined with :left, :right, :both suffixes in the usual way, resulting in cycleway:both=*, cycleway:left=*, cycleway:right=* tags and their variants.

Meaningful cycleway attributes, which could be added, are in particular:

For cycle tracks, consider drawing them as separate geometry and capturing these attributes (without the cycleway prefix) on this separate way way (e.g. highway=cycleway + surface=* + width=*), as the attributes there are used by more software/data consumers.

See also

External links