Jay_May
(Jay May)
12
O.K. hadw.
In this case, do you propose another solution in order to distinguish those channels?
As I wrote above: they are rarely signed beforewards (or sometimes microscopically - which is dangerous while driving).
If there is an enormous queue at the border, you may be wasting your time waiting in the wrong lane unnecessarily because you can’t see such info on your map. It happened to me at Medininkai, for instance.
I personally know people who plan their trip first to a specific border checkpoint. When they noticed the lanes were starting to be differentiated on maps.me (green channel etc.), they were more than glad because they started using the data on that “barrier:border control” tag. Not all users just use the final arrival point on their GPS-es without having a look at their routes!
Hence, I really don’t see any other solution because the current technology doesn’t allow us to do that. But perhaps you will correct me if you see another solution? Maybe there is an OSM trick I don’t know? IMHO, sticking strictly to the “name and name only rule” in this specific case may look aesthetically better, but it brings more confusion to final users.
Regarding the problems you mentioned above:
- This is checkable while driving there or, as above, on borderguard website sources (I privilege local knowledge, which is why I noticed the Brest border checkpoint had changed)
- For this case, the “old_name” tag should be used.
- Can’t this be resolved by creating a grouping relation between the border checkpoint buildings and the area?
About the “customs channel” tag - I would appreciate if you explained because this is not one thing on which I am an expert. Nevertheless, let us bear in mind there are numerous border checkpoints with borderguards only (and without customs officers).
Signing all the area as “border control” is wrong, because the border control doesn’t take place in all the area, just at specific spots within those areas.