I use both 1 and 2. The way I see it, 2 is a better level of detail, which means if you are in the mood for a bit of more detailed mapping you should definitely go ahead and draw in the building outline.
You could also convert things from approach 1 to approach 2 when you’re bored. This is clear-cut good contribution when you’re working with your own nodes. Of course when converting other people’s nodes, there’s a chance you might receive complaints or criticism for fiddling with somebody elses data, but in my opinion this criticism would be misguided. Going from individual nodes to building outlines is always a good improvement in the level of detail.
BUT… mappers shouldn’t feel bad about taking a shortcut and just doing approach 1. Approach 2 is a better level of details, but is certainly not “required”, and approach 2 involves a lot of fannying around with the editor, so consider this: What is more useful? An entire town of buildings mapped out as nodes, or just one neighbourhood with all the building outlines done. Nothing wrong with approach 1.
Approach 3 shouldn’t really be used, See Good Practice. “One feature, one OSM-object” …but another common approach in a city context, is to draw a single outline of a building which then contains several features tagged as individual nodes. e.g. a row of shops/cafes in a city block. That seems fine to me.
There’s lots of “level of detail” questions when mapping, particularly when you start mapping house numbers! Generally more detail is better (more “depth” to the data if you like) but don’t burn out your editing energy on that kind of thing at the expense of mapping more features (more “breadth” to the data)
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