siberiano
(Ы-ы-ыть)
6
Thanks to all for suggestions.
I wish there were photos of the place or Google Street View. Is there any mapillary photo?
Will look, thanks!
Regarding case 2, its part of a steret, and it was allowed to ride there (not sure what’s there now), and trams were stuck in congestions. The transit dept published a chart from that street. At night a ride would take 20 minutes, in daytime it would take between 40 and 120 minutes.
I’ll look up the links, thanks!
PostGIS/QGIS/GeoPandas are my day job tools, and OSM database too. I can try checking this, but I think there will be some false negatives. The photo #3 actually is one of them.

I checked the usage of “lanes” tag in Russian cities, and it’s not everywhere. More than that, car lanes width is very inconsistent. We’ve had debates with traffic and transit departments over bicycle lanes, and went out for inspection with cycling activists. We found out that 4m-wide lanes are frequent, and actually there are several hundred meters of a 5.5m bus lane.
There are places with 8…9 m wide pavement (poor planning, I know, that’s what I keep saying when I get a chance :)). Guess how many lanes are there? Either 2 (normally) or 3 at intersections (2 approaching and one leaving the intersection), you can never tell.
My idea was to just let tram enthusiasts tag the tram lines, which is the minimum amount of work. And usually, there are enough of them in every city to remember the situation in every street.
Thank you very much!