Talk:Tag:highway=corridor
tunnel=building_passage conflicting definition
This page had the text "not to be confused with the combination tagging of highway=footway and tunnel=building_passage, which relates to a tunnel which begins at a point outside the building and ends at a point outside the building". However the part "a tunnel which begins at a point outside the building and ends at a point outside the building" clearly conflicts with the approved definition of building passage http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/building_passage#tunnel.3Dbuilding_passage]].
Currently it is not clear if there is any meaningful distinction between highway=corridor and tunnel=building_passage however it would appear that a tunnel is a way "isolated" from the building whereas a corridor is just that - many door and other ways connecting it to other elements of the building. RicoZ (talk) 11:33, 19 February 2017 (UTC)
- I think your viewpoint is probably controversial: tunnel=building_passage has always been used for highways which are external to a building but which look absurd when rendered over the building. Anyone using this tag for indoor mapping is doing it incorrectly and vice versa. The only marginal cases I can think of is where the building passage if protected by doors, but in these cases they only connect with other ways which are not inside buildings. SK53 (talk) 12:55, 19 February 2017 (UTC)
- The point is, the linked proposal and current definition describe exactly how to map tunnel=building_passage and this is in contradiction to the deleted text. What you are describing is some kind of mapping for the renderer edge case.
- I am not a great friend of tunnel=building_passage, imo and by apparent intention of the author of the proposal it should have actually been covered=building_passage but was realized as tunnel ... you guess it .. as a mapping for the renderer hack. If I had some spare time I would propose covered=buidling_passage right now. RicoZ (talk) 15:05, 19 February 2017 (UTC)
- The deleted text is alright when you replace "outside the building" with "on the outline of the building". However, the main difference between a highway=corridor and a tunnel=building_passage is certainly that a highway=corridor connects rooms or indoor facilities, while the purpose of a tunnel=building_passage is to connect outside ways and facilities. --Fkv (talk) 13:58, 29 May 2017 (UTC)
Only for pedestrians
Hello. If I understand correctly, this tag is only for pedestrian ways inside a building. Parking aisles inside covered parking lot for example should be tagged with highway=service, service=parking_aisle and indoor=yes. If I am correct, I think it would be good to make clear on this page that this tag is only for pedestrian ways inside a building. I also wonder whether this tag is useful, because we could tag corridors as highway=footway and indoor=yes, which would be consistent with the tagging of other indoor highways. Autharite (talk) 11:35, 18 August 2017 (UTC)
Inside of building questions
The definition of this tag says "to map a hallway inside of a building" which leads me to two questions:
- The "See Also" section refers to the covered=* tag "for ways outside of the building"--but isn't highway=corridor only for inside a building?
- It appears this tag should not be used for tunnels which connect buildings. Is this also the case for "skyways" (enclosed footbridges) that connect buildings?--Neuhausr (talk) 15:06, 15 March 2018 (UTC)
- Looks like the Wikipedia skyway maps to Tag:building=bridge. There's some guesses on how to map it on that page, but nothing about highway=. --Artoria2e5 (talk) 08:43, 9 July 2024 (UTC)