Woazboat
(Woazboat)
48
A big reason why that approach was bound to fail and leaves us with the mess we currently have (even though it does make sense in a way) is that we do not really have any tagging schemes that describe the practicality of using a path with a bicycle, etc…
The access tagging scheme is only concerned with legal matters (which is a good thing, don’t dilute it by mixing other things into it).
Tags that describe the physical properties such as surface, smoothness, width … can help to make a judgement whether a path is suitable to ride a bike on, but they are very time consuming and difficult to tag. Picking the right values can be hard even when you are right there, standing directly on the path you are trying to describe. Doing it accurately using only aerial images, even after having actually walked a path is bordering on impossible.
If I see a mountain hiking path on the map or on aerial imagery, I know that using it with a bicycle (not talking about MTBs) is completely impractical, but I have no way to actually add that information.
An approach like that would probably have worked for ‘normal’ roads for cars. (Car-)Roads have far less variability than paths for pedestrians/cyclists/horseback riders/hikers.
The difference between highway classifications (highway=primary/secondary/tertiary/…) is often not really distinguishable on the ground and doesn’t change the main conclusion that can be drawn from the tag: ‘car goes brrr’.
The importance/classification of a road could just as well be added as as sub-tag without massively changing its meaning.