It is true that you should map what is there, not how it looks, (although this has to be one of the most broken rules since people ‘map what renders’) but place= is one element that this rule can’t be applied to when tagging a node, since the place is an area, so tagging within that area is ‘tagging what’s there’ so shifting it around doesn’t break this rule, and allows for a nicer rendering. Apart from this though I strongly stick to the ‘map how it is’ concept.

I think there are really 4 bits of data that can be stated. (Spelling it out to be sure…)

  1. The administrative area of a village/town.

  2. The village/town boundary (where the houses stop). For villages in particular the difference between 1 and 2 is huge, as the village will take up a tiny percentage of the admistrative area (in the UK this is so anyway)

  3. The point at which people should leave from and be taken to when asking for a route from x to y.

  4. The place at which the name is displayed. (Unless as I said above it’s possible for the renderer to make these artistic decisions.

  5. Uses the relation type:boundary; boundary:administrative; admin_level=x; name=x

  6. An area tagged with place=x and place_name=x? (also you (emj) stated area=yes? the conversation you linked to, which I’m not clear as to why if your tagging a closed way? (elaborate please!))
    3 and 4 are the two I’m not clear on how to break apart.

If a route planner does ‘find’ nearest road to that node, (as in Gosmore example [which I havn’t used]) then that is defiantly better than starting with the ‘brisk walk’ but ideally the start point can be pre-stated in osm’s data to ensure that it is in the best possible spot, rather than nearest spot to the named spot.

So I think that yes, map how it is, when you can only do 1 choice, but if we can add 2, I see no reason why not also to have map-rendering data there, especially in this case where a singular point marked as ‘place=’ doesn’t exist in reality anyway usually, or a point/sign saying ‘start routes here’!. If there were giant signs to map then mapping how it is would address this issue.

A picture speaks a thousand words, so this should make it simpler. It also makes me wonder. If 2. is 2 different areas, should we keep them as 1 by linking the apparent 2 seperate areas into 1 by sticking ways both ways along the road between them? Seems messy.