On Fri, 14 Jun 2019 at 03:04, John Willis via Tagging <
tagging@openstreetmap.org> wrote:
>
>
> > On Jun 13, 2019, at 4:22 PM, Paul Allen wrote:
> >
> > Conversion of farm buildings to residential buildings is not only
> possible, it's frequent in
> > some parts of the world.
>
> Very true, but e
> On Jun 13, 2019, at 4:22 PM, Paul Allen wrote:
>
> Conversion of farm buildings to residential buildings is not only possible,
> it's frequent in
> some parts of the world.
Very true, but even a house or cottage inside a working farmyard would still be
on a landuse mapped as a farmyard. Th
On Thu, 13 Jun 2019 at 02:25, Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Usually they won't be used for residential purposes .. unless they have
> been demolished.
>
Around here a LOT of farms have converted at least one outbuilding to a
holiday cottage.
Most are still working farms. In some cases
On 12/06/19 23:25, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
sent from a phone
On 12. Jun 2019, at 15:04, John Willis via Tagging
wrote:
Am I right to consider these old-style family farm complexes landuse=farmyard?
I would generally respond yes, but if they aren’t actually used by farmers any
more, so
sent from a phone
> On 12. Jun 2019, at 15:04, John Willis via Tagging
> wrote:
>
> Am I right to consider these old-style family farm complexes landuse=farmyard?
I would generally respond yes, but if they aren’t actually used by farmers any
more, something like landuse=residential with hi
I'm trying to map rural farming hamlets, and because land is at a premium in
Japan, a single farmers "family" will have a small area with a very old
abandoned collapsing house filled with old farming junk, an old house, a new
house, a old stone storehouse or barn, several tractor garages/toolshe