Proposal talk:Cycleway hierarchy
Fuzzy concept
The proposed values do not have clear definitions. I would have no idea how to determine the correct value in my own community (Norway). If implemented, I think we would get endless discussions about tagging.
I think the physical characteristics of the cycleway, tagged with other keys such as cycleway=*, surface=*, segregated=*, lanes=* etc, are more important for the biker. We already have the network=* tag which takes care of important national and regional routes and which display nicely on a map. Also, you have a separate proposal for cycleway=expressway. --NKA (talk) 08:10, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- The point was explicitly to NOT capture physical traits, but only importance/function/role. Hence the example of the two physically/"taggingly" indistinguishable cycleways, where one is long, continuous, and well-connected, and the other one is short, discontinuous and disconnected. Their importance/functions, i.e. their place in the hierarchy, are very different. This is the same concept as primary/secondary/tertiary for highway, which also does not capture the physical state.
- The proposition that network=* can handle this, is valid, but to me somewhat misplaced. The documented role of network seems to be to capture a specific network, not importance/function. A road can be classified with a hierarchy per this proposal even if it is not a part of a specific network. --Balchen (talk) 10:11, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- If it helps, any mention of typical physical traits can be removed. Typical physical traits are discussed for highway=primary etc, but I see no problem with removing them from this proposal. --Balchen (talk) 11:06, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- AFAICS this proposal relies on essentially subjective criteria. I very much doubt that major consumers for bicycle routing will consume this tag even if implemented. You should try & seek feedback from CycleStreets, cycle.travel, OpenCycleMap etc. SK53 (talk) 11:10, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- In NO, municipalities and counties with a formalised cycle network (as opposed to just random cycleways) will have these formally divided into a hierachy. Those without a cycle network will not, so there will be cycleways with no hierarchical classification. This is part of the proposal. NL and BE also have a hierarchy that is reflected in their route numbering system (e.g. the Dutch F-routes). TfL cycle superhighways are also a formal classification of hierarchy. I don't see that this is essentially subjective.
- I can't speak to what software will do in the future, but using the hierarchial classification of a roadway as an option to generate alternative driving routes is ubiquitous for car routing. Would that be different for bike routing? --Balchen (talk) 11:43, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- AFAICS this proposal relies on essentially subjective criteria. I very much doubt that major consumers for bicycle routing will consume this tag even if implemented. You should try & seek feedback from CycleStreets, cycle.travel, OpenCycleMap etc. SK53 (talk) 11:10, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
The overlap with routes and networks
I don't agree physical standards should be represented in here. Functionality is the point of highway=*. There was in fact network:type=basic_network suggested, but that's not really good, as it is simply classified in a network without being a uniquely identified route. You could easily make them a network=* or *cn=yes without creating a type=route, if there are some characteristic that categorizes it. This applies especially since you have signage here. To solve the problem of network=* and cycle_network=*, there is network:area=* and network:name=* to allow more general separate tagging. Do we need a footway:hierarchy=* as well? --- Kovposch (talk) 09:17, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- I agree that physical standard will not be represented here. Hence the exhaustive comparison of examples where the physical standard may be indistinguishable, yet the proposed hierarchy tag could be different.
- The purpose is to capture the importance/function/role that the road serves, not its physical standard. --Balchen (talk) 10:11, 11 August 2022 (UTC)