Thanks for the responses. It is great to see that people are busy replacing the interpolation slowly with building house numbers sourced from surveys. And, yes, please do delete the interpolation lines when a street is completely surveyed. It will help reduce confusion for the data users (and also tell the next mapper that the street is done).

Oh no, I wasn’t thinking that. Some of the broken interpolations have been created only yesterday (Way: 1282312246 | OpenStreetMap). This is also what prompted me to write in the forum here. I was wondering if it isn’t better to stop these imports for a bit and improve the process before continuing.

That’s more along the lines I was thinking. In particular, I’m wondering if there is something remote armchair mappers could help with.

One thing that comes to mind are the interpolation lines that are cut on CanVec tile boundaries. It should be fairly easy to create a list of problematic ways and to fix them remotely by joining the ways. Could be a MapRoulette challenge.

Other improvements are more problematic without local knowledge and I wouldn’t want to start larger edits without the consent of the local community: Condensing one-address interpolation lines to points might work with armchair mapping. At least short ones like Way: 357011203 | OpenStreetMap should be fairly save to do (except for the fact that it sometimes not clear if the number exists at all), the longer ones like Way: 1281057082 | OpenStreetMap are a bit trickier but it might be possible from aerials to identify the one house along the road the address likely belongs to.

Maybe you already had other ideas for armchair fixing.

That’s a case that is clearly not fixable without going out an surveying. But that begs the question, isn’t it better to delete the data completely in that case? Right now it does quite a bit of damage because it leads people to the wrong place. Better to have no data. And when the error is fixed by surveying, it can be done with on-the-ground data. The CanVec data will not help.