Hi guys 
Actually, as a regular OSM contributor and a maps.me and OsmAnd user, I do agree on the fact we should use those âhgvâ, âmotorcarâ, âmotorcycleâ, âbusâ tags.
I also agree that the road classification of each lane should be the same (unless, of course, it is a lane leading towards a Duty Free or towards toilets, for instance.)
However, there is one thing I do not agree with: the absence of names!
Those âbarrier=border controlâ tags should systematically have names. Why?
Sure you can play with the tags I mentioned above when it comes to bus lanes, truck lanes etc. Those tags are extremely important (and not always filled) for your GPS to lead you through the lane corresponding to your vehicle while transiting.
However, this wonât help in any way to plan your trip to a specific spot on the border checkpoint. Even worse: it wonât help you differentiate a couple of lanes with criteria that do not exist on access tags on OSM.
For instance:
- Entering the EU, youâve got âEU, EEA, CH lanesâ and âall passports lanesâ, all differentiated additionally by ânothing to declareâ and âgoods to declareâ. Example below at the LavoriĆĄkÄs (Lithuania) border checkpoint:
- Entering Belarus, youâve got those âGreen channelâ (for Russian Customs Union cars) and âRed Channelâ (for cars from other countries). Example from the Bieniakoni border checkpoint below:
When you do differentiate clearly âgreen channel, red channel, all passports âŠâ, it helps people to choose the right lane. Even better: it helps them planify their journey to that specific border checkpoint. Especially given the fact sometimes that info is so badly signed you need a microscope to understand where you need to go (those who tried the Lithuanian Medininkai and Ć alÄininkai border checkpoints know what Iâm talking about) 
Names are even more important if we take in account the fact that some border checkpointsâ names totally differ from the city/town/village they are on.
Ex.:
- Before the Schengen era, Poland had the âOgrodnikiâ border checkpoint with Lithuania, which was not situated in the eponymous village, but in the village of HoĆny Mejera. If you added no name, your GPS wouldnât find that checkpoint. Just a couple of villages called âOgrodnikiâ. Same at a couple of (former) border checkpoints around: Kalvarija in Lithuania, etc. I could find lots of such examples.
- A couple of years ago, the nowadaysâ Brest border checkpoint was called âVarĆĄaĆski mostâ (someone recently unnecessarily reverted that name). If there were no name, it would be impossible to find that border checkpoint because there is no locality called âVarĆĄaĆski mostâ.
- Additionally, if I didnât have any look at the Belarusian border committeeâs website, I would have no clue that the above mentioned âBrestâ border checkpoint is only for cars and for buses, whereas the nearby KazĆoviÄy border checkpoint is only for trucks. When you drive to Brest, it is indicated nowhere early enough to make you change your decision on-time.
- Youâve also got a lot of border checkpoints for âlocal traffic onlyâ or âonly for citizens of country A and country Bâ. If you donât include that in the info, there is no way your GPS will ask you âdo you live in that area?â or âare you a citizen of country A or country Bâ before you plan your journey.
For all the reasons above, despite aesthetically it doesnât always look good, including names+additional info is essential while mapping those border checkpoints. If you add no name including an additional info to the âbarrier:border controlâ tag, forget that people will understand why they canât drive through. They will be clicking like crazy âwhy canât I drive there if I have a car?â
We are lucky enough to work on an open-source map. This means we can discuss the rules between ourselves and change them. OSM is not a rule museum!
And most importantly: we must also bear in mind that lots of apps use OSM as their source, which means we must always be much more user-oriented than map-freak-oriented while mapping.
If we provide insufficient or wrong info, that info is automatically reflected on all those apps.