wrenoud
(Weston Renoud)
5
Hi all. Thanks for the thoughtful replies.
Definitely doing this to get more familiar with the platform, and to build a personal sense of how committed I can/will be to the maintenance of my edits. When Google Maps had a plaform for contribution I was a regular contributor, but did not transition to OSM when their platform was shut down.
Actually from the US but lived/studied/worked in Canada for several years. Now living in Utrecht and working in Zeist. I am not even close to fluent in Dutch, but I make use of Google Translate extensively so I did read the entirety of the threads that observer linked to.
I appreciate this. I am curious where that line is drawn for specifically the OpenStreetMap community. When is it better for datasets to live outside OSM and simply be overlayed versus actually living in the OSM dataset? And/or is there room for partial imports with clear source linking/attribution?
I understand that identifying individual trees in a planted forest instead of using a landuse=forest area does not make broad cartographic sense (except to a very narrow audience such as forest managers). In contrast, in a city with planned trees which are in general ornamental, and multiuse traffic that likely will have to interact with those trees, I quickly see reasons for trees to be mapped. The Utrecht dataset is actively managed, and in my experience tends to reflect what I would describe as trees of interest, but there are exceptions as the maintainers primary interest is not navigation but instead stock management. For example, some densely forested parks have every tree mapped, probably not of value. On the flip side there are trees mapped in OSM in some high traffic public squares of the city that no longer exsist, this removal is reflected in the Utrecht Bomen dataset (peeking at some licensed image datasets it appears this error is >2 years old). There are other squares for which no trees are shown but would probably be of value to have them mapped. At a minimum, tagging the trees that are mapped in OSM with a reference to the Utrecht Bomen dataset would provide a tool for detecting such errors.
I am from the area, I have lived in Utrecht for 2 years and have no plans yet to move. I did think about contacting the city, and if this moves forward will absolutely make that contact, but felt that touching base with the OSM community first would be best. Though I do not plan to manage trees ad infinitum in Utrecht, for the next several years at least, if there are some easy tools for deconflicting between OSM and the Utrecht Bomen dataset I do envision maintaining the mapped trees in the area.