On Mon, 2013-12-09 at 00:55 -0600, Paul Johnson wrote:
> On Sunday, December 8, 2013, Jonathan wrote:
> It's the sort of building that houses the security guards or
> gatekeeper. They operate the gates to allow entrance to or
> exit from the site. May contain security guar
Recent in the sense that only public broadcasting nerds had access to 30+
year old reruns until about 5 years ago in the US; it wasn't exactly
mainstream by any stretch.
On Mon, Dec 9, 2013 at 1:24 AM, Andrew Errington wrote:
> On 9 December 2013 15:55, Paul Johnson wrote:
> > Pinkertons call t
On 9 December 2013 15:55, Paul Johnson wrote:
> Pinkertons call this a Police Box, at least in the pacific northwestern US,
> and even prior to the recent Doctor Who fad.
Recent?
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On Sunday, December 8, 2013, Jonathan wrote:
> It's the sort of building that houses the security guards or gatekeeper.
> They operate the gates to allow entrance to or exit from the site. May
> contain security guards who patrol the fences/area. May contain security
> equipment such as camera
I like building=gatehouse for those buildings that typically sit beside an
access gate. There are numerous such buildings in Thailand where I do the
bulk of my mapping. It seems every big corporate campus has them as do all
gated_communities. To me, security_post implies soldiers rather than
employ
> Am 08/dic/2013 um 19:36 schrieb Philip Barnes :
>
> The English term would be a police box (police_box).
thank you.
My suggestion is to use building for the structure. Maybe we can add more tags
later regarding the capabilities (e.g. "capacity"(?) for the amount of people
that have a plac
Philip Barnes wrote:
> On Sun, 2013-12-08 at 08:51 -0800, Tod Fitch wrote:
> > It has been a while since I worked in a facility with such a
> building. But I recall it being called a "guard shack" or "guard
> house". Taginfo has only one guard_shack (and one guard_booth) but
> does have 100 guardh
On Sun, 2013-12-08 at 19:17 +0100, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
> Btw, how would you call a small structure like this:
> https://maps.google.it/maps?q=rom&ll=41.879601,12.496149&spn=0.00167,0.003473&safe=off&hnear=Rom,+Latium&gl=it&t=m&z=19&layer=c&cbll=41.879677,12.496087&panoid=48p0hYYLAJMPzfxFbg_W
Btw, how would you call a small structure like this:
https://maps.google.it/maps?q=rom&ll=41.879601,12.496149&spn=0.00167,0.003473&safe=off&hnear=Rom,+Latium&gl=it&t=m&z=19&layer=c&cbll=41.879677,12.496087&panoid=48p0hYYLAJMPzfxFbg_W5A&cbp=12,22.08,,2,4.41
These are used by the police to control t
2013/12/8 Jonathan
> Wikipedia suggests a gatehouse as a medieval construction:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatehouse
>
> building=gatehouse has been used 19 times, but in what context I don't
> know.
>
there's also another usage of the term in the context of dams:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wi
On Sun, 2013-12-08 at 08:51 -0800, Tod Fitch wrote:
> It has been a while since I worked in a facility with such a building. But I
> recall it being called a "guard shack" or "guard house". Taginfo has only one
> guard_shack (and one guard_booth) but does have 100 guardhouse entries. The
> few b
It has been a while since I worked in a facility with such a building. But I
recall it being called a "guard shack" or "guard house". Taginfo has only one
guard_shack (and one guard_booth) but does have 100 guardhouse entries. The few
building=guardhouse entries that I looked at via bing imagery
On Sun, Dec 08, 2013 at 04:14:33PM +, Jonathan wrote:
> Wikipedia suggests a gatehouse as a medieval construction:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatehouse
>
> building=gatehouse has been used 19 times, but in what context I don't know.
+1. Agree that it is might be ambiguous.
___
On 12/8/13 11:14 AM, Jonathan wrote:
> Wikipedia suggests a gatehouse as a medieval construction:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatehouse
>
> building=gatehouse has been used 19 times, but in what context I don't
> know.
wikipedia is sometimes slightly off the mark. gatehouse (or gate house) is
in
Wikipedia suggests a gatehouse as a medieval construction:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatehouse
building=gatehouse has been used 19 times, but in what context I don't know.
Jonathan
http://bigfatfrog67.me
On 08/12/2013 15:39, Philip Barnes wrote:
On Sun, 2013-12-08 at 15:28 +, Jonathan
On 12/8/13 10:39 AM, Philip Barnes wrote:
> Where I have worked, and industrial sites that I have visited over my
> long career, that building is always called 'the gate house'.
>
> I would suggest building=gatehouse, or gate_house, although neither had
> any previous useage :)
>
same in the US. th
On Sun, 2013-12-08 at 15:28 +, Jonathan wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Just went to tag a building at the main entrance/exit to an industrial
> site and couldn't really find a well used or documented tag.
>
> It's the sort of building that houses the security guards or
> gatekeeper. They operate the
Hi all,
Just went to tag a building at the main entrance/exit to an industrial
site and couldn't really find a well used or documented tag.
It's the sort of building that houses the security guards or
gatekeeper. They operate the gates to allow entrance to or exit from
the site. May contai
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