Some renderers have handled industrial=
on it’s own for ages - see e.g. mine here.
It’s not that uncommon - try moving this overpass query around.
Some renderers have handled industrial=
on it’s own for ages - see e.g. mine here.
It’s not that uncommon - try moving this overpass query around.
This needs to be clarified: The wiki said that this tag is not a primary key which can not be used standalone before some kind of edit war started on this page. Wiki page for Key:industrial has been completely rewritten. Was this discussed or voted on? (for anyone not following)
Same landuse=*
inside another landuse=*
is somewhat acceptable (ditto for =residential
) , but is fundamentally only a workaround for the lack of suitable feature tags. I avoid it as much as possible, only using at the largest functional level (individual industrial parks, or “plots” when standalone). landuse=
is a homogeneous statistical classification of the land (effectively a paint on the map). Other than a few viz =works
, There is no man_made=
feature to act as the PoI for many industrial=
facilities.
While I generally agree with all of your post, there is this sentence which merits attention, IMHO. “Zoning” is about the permissible landuse, it is a planning instrument, what we are recording with landuse is the actual current landuse as observable on the ground. This may be about the same in many regions, but it could also considerably diverge in other places, so it is important to note it is the actual landuse, not the permissible.
I offer huge gratitude to you for making this distinction. Yes, I was lazy in conflating zoning and landuse, as that has been done in OSM around here (USA) and in fact an early “clean up” I did was somebody who had imported (circa 2009) the Zoning polygons from my county GIS into landuse=*
tagging, and I’ve literally been cleaning it up for 14 years.
You are both correct about “this may be about the same in many regions” as well as “it could also considerably diverge.” You make the critical distinction between the two as landuse=*
being actual landuse, while “zoning” (and this varies quite a bit depending on state and local laws) is what is permissible landuse (by law). Sometimes the same, sometimes not, occasionally conflated around here, conflated by me earlier, though I shouldn’t have done that. Thank you for your clarification, I’m sure I’m not the only one helped by you pointing this out as you have.
We use landuse=military
to tag a large area (perhaps along with military=base
) but contained within that area are often multiple independently tagged military=*
items (e.g., barracks) for which we do not duplicate the landuse tag.
In theory, I see no reason why it should be any different if there are genuine uses of an industrial=
tag.
I like that one - unfortunately not available for my area. …
I also agree with @dieterdreist but nevertheless I got your point anyhow …
The difference is industrial=
grew under landuse=industrial
, and remains the dominant use. The 2nd most common combination is double-tagging with man_made=
or craft=
. What’s left without having any of them is only ~14k = ~5%. The 3k node
in this is related to whether landuse=
can be used on a point (which is acceptable to me, same as building=
).
In comparison, military=
has been used as features early on, eg =trench
. That being said, there is some overlap of military=bunker
(that’s ~52%) with building=bunker
depending on how it should be defined, as Proposal:Military bases - OpenStreetMap Wiki has changed =barracks
to be for buildings only. Same for it suggesting office=military
instead of military=office
.
military=airfield
has also been asked on its combination with =aerodrome
. Talk:Tag:military=airfield - OpenStreetMap Wiki
I don’t see a particular problem with one landuse=industrial and industrial=* polygon or landuse=industrial and and man_made=* polygon being inside another landuse=industrial polygon, with the former indicating a specific industrial use and the latter that there is general industrial use.
Similarly, I have no problem with landuse=grass Way: 29094789 | OpenStreetMap for a neighbourhood green space inside landuse=residential. or landuse=retail Way: 276177733 | OpenStreetMap for neighbourhood shops within a larger landuse=residential area.
The definition of the landuse key is according to the wiki:
“Mainly used for describing the primary use of areas of land. Show/edit corresponding data item.”
Please emphasize “primary” here. You cannot have two primary land uses at the same time. This rules out an overlap of landuse areas.
Similarly, I have no problem with landuse=grass
because “grass” is not a landuse
It’s true to say that “landuse” in OSM is supposed to be fairly broad-brush, but I think it’s possible to be a little over-zealous, especially when it comes to interpreting what someone’s written in the wiki.
I can think of plenty of examples of multiple overlapping landuse - this afternoon I walked through an area that has been engineered as a basin to store floodwater (a natural dip has been increased, and clay’s been used to control drainage). When not full of water, it’s also got sheep grazing there. Further up the same river, a new floodwater storage scheme is been engineered as a wetland wildlife habitat.
note “mainly” and later explicit mention of possibility of multiple overlapping landuses.
Maybe it should be made even more visible.
Yes, but with an example so that this restriction becomes more tangible. Namely, for example, a playground in a landuse=residential. Not two landuse=industrial on top of each other. That is a very big difference and, in my view, the latter is no longer covered by this exception.
This was my point of view for quite some time but I have to admit that there are cases where an area cannot clearly be assigned to one landuse only. The best example imho are military areas which are used as managed forests as long as there is no military training going on. Or
In some of these cases one can avoid using 2 different landuse tags for the same area by using some other tags like natural=* or water=* or leisure=* as workaround but that is just a formality - fact is that some ares are subject to different landuse changing time by time.
Nevertheless I would always try to avoid overlapping landuse as far as possible.
Agreed, that’s how I see it in general and many mappers do so as well but I understood (from some of the earlier comments) that others see the broad coverage landuse as a first mapping step, possibly being refined later into more detailed coverage landuse mapping.
So the rule is: go ahead one way or the other.
In the USA, there are many instances (especially in urban areas / central business districts) where a single “site,” a building, usually, is what we call “mixed use.” For example, my little city has what many decades ago was an old leather tannery, but over the last decade or two has been redeveloped into an “arts district,” where the old buildings are part live-in industrial space (for artists who lease industrial space in lofts where they can craft things like glass-blowing art and metal casting), while also having small residential apartments where they live. Additionally, there are (rather nice, high-end, “High Street”) kinds of shops where the art is displayed and sold. Restaurants and public theatre space round out the amenities, so it truly is all of commercial, residential and industrial on one site (in a couple of cases, on different floors of the same building). The solution here seems to be similar to other tagging in OSM where “the highest, most intensive usage tends to dominate the tagging.” (For example, in rail tagging, a railway is tagged usage=main
instead of usage=branch
even as the latter might seem more correct, because a line is a heavily-travelled passenger rail, it gets main). So our Tannery Arts Center (remains) tagged industrial, even as it also has (pockets of) commercial and residential landuse on-site.
Similarly, my little county has areas that are “zoned residential-agriculture,” roughly meaning a family farm (farming occurs, but there is also an area surrounded by landuse=farmyard which has a house, barn and other appurtenant structures for farming, or living, such as a poolhouse to house the machinery to filter / heat the water and offer clothes-changing cabanas).
So, you absolutely can have two primary land uses at the same time, even in the same building, for example on different floors. Mostly, “pick one,” again, it has emerged as an OSM convention to use “highest use” (often industrial) when there is a choice. This isn’t limited to big, urban centers, either: there are many, many small towns across this country where a shop exists at the ground level and the owners / proprietors live upstairs. There may also be a “shop around the back” for maintenance / repair which could correctly be classified as industrial landuse, so again: a “three-in-one.” In that case, I’d tag landuse=commercial
, as that predominates.
The point of conflict there is that the landuse
key indicates either land use or land cover, because attempts to split out a separate landcover
key haven’t quite succeeded yet. This is on top of the conflict between using landuse
areas to paint broad swaths of the map that are contiguous by happenstance, versus using the same key to indicate the land use of a specific site.
The broad-brush approach is entrenched in large part because renderers treat landuse
as a thematic layer. If we were to rationalize landuse
tagging to focus more explicitly on answering “What is it?”, then landuse=industrial
would be replaced by a number of tags under man_made=*
and a few other yet-to-be-coined keys. Former landuse=industrial
areas would have quite different tagging than former landuse=commercial
areas. This would be frustrating for traditional OSM rendering stacks as well as anyone coming from a GIS background.
On the other hand, the more granular land use areas often represent hard-won local knowledge about both the land use and the edges of that land use, which can’t easily be detected from aerial imagery using machine learning. The broad-brush land use mapping should never come at the expense of this valuable data.
I partially agree. If I map a named development that’s already covered by a broad-brush land use area, I go out of my way to cut out a piece of the existing land use area to avoid overlap.
On the other hand, if I’m mapping some even more granular land use within a development, such as a golf course, waste dump, or residential subdivision on a military base, I won’t cut it out of the military base, because some overlap is fine in these cases. Think of the smaller land use area as an exception to the larger land use area. Renderers can follow the example set by osm-carto, which automatically prioritizes rendering the smaller area over the larger areas.
f we were to rationalize
landuse
tagging to focus more explicitly on answering “What is it?”, thenlanduse=industrial
would be replaced by a number of tags underman_made=*
and a few other yet-to-be-coined keys.
not necessarily, we also don’t remove landuse=residential when we map residential buildings. landuse sorts human landuse into very few generic categories, which more or less correspond to the categories that are used in zoning (residential, commercial, industrial, retail and some more specific like allotments, cemetery, religious, education).
One
One gets some interesting green hues in doing so. Last case, soccer pitch on a sports center has each it’s standard green type, but if you map the grass cover fringes between the tartan and the soccer pitch, that gets a real odd green as if the sports centers hex was mixed with the grass hex and it was no fooling the eye, took snapshot and measured with color picker.
Sample at request roughed out in the boondocks with grass finger at left and grass round pitch.
An example would help to show what you are describing here?
Edit: and a location so that we can see what the tags are?
Yes, this is what I mean by a thematic layer. After all, “land use/land cover” is a typical checkbox on a GIS map’s layer selector and a typical chapter in a well-rounded atlas. I’m not suggesting that we replace landuse
outright, but if we were to do so, we would have to think about all the complexity hidden behind these general categories.
What observable characteristics of a spot of land make it industrial
in our eyes? The factories, certainly, but also the equipment strewn about, the disorganized patches of paved and unpaved surface that no one bothers to landscape, the expectation that pedestrians usually have no business there, even if they’re legally permitted, the noise, the smell, and so on.
All of this can be as true of the named, partially fenced-in premises of a private entity as it is true of a contiguous swath of land operated by multiple such entities. But we don’t necessarily have an intuitive, precise word for every instance of the former – witness the uncertainty about how to classify a depot or yard. So in case of doubt, we fall back to tagging it as a landuse
area, since at least we can say that much about what the name is applied to and what the fence fences in.
There’s no tag to explicitly distinguish the mapping of these more “deliberate” land use areas from the 50,000-foot land use mapping. Thus the need to occasionally cut one out of the other or accept some overlap.