Not around here. Not every time. They are very inventive around here. Lots of different solutions. Perhaps one day they’ll come up with a solution that is logical.

Unless somebody speaks out against it soon, I’ll employ that bit of abuse to get the terrace on the map. Maybe with a fixme to invite somebody to come up with something better, maybe just a note saying perhaps there’s a better way. I expect various purists will moan if I do that, but unless they come up with something better…

I just found another one today, but worse. There is a terrace where the side of one member is on The Strand, but the front of all three houses are on Carrier’s Lane. Nevertheless, these are all “Brick Row, The Strand.” At least they have a different postcode from the places that are really on The Strand.

Many thanks. I suspect I may be able to provide a few more different examples as I map more of Cardigan.

I know of one like that here. Well, I don’t know if the road layout changed, or original names went out of use (I have dug out a historical map of Cardigan showing that several roads changed name, and part of one road changed name]) but the end result is similar to your example. Partway along High Street there one building with the address Grosvenor Hill. There is an alley that runs along the side of that building to another building, Grosvenor Cottage, which has the address High Street (not Grosvenor Hill as you might expect). There is a bus stop further along High Street which the timetables show as Grosvenor Hill although buildings around it are on High Street. Surprisingly, given the illogic that abounds, that building with the address Grosvenor Hill actually is partway up a hill on High Street.

I can understand what prompted the invention of “what3words,” MapCode, Makaney codes, etc.

I can also understand why Royal Mail decided that house name or number plus postcode uniquely specified an address and that anything else is superfluous. Maybe Royal Mail postcodes were designed by somebody who lived in Wales for a while.