On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 2:04 AM, Ross Scanlon <i...@4x4falcon.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 29 Aug 2010 01:04:09 -0400
> Nathan Edgars II <nerou...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> There doesn't seem to be a tag on the wiki for either handicapped
>> parking spots in a larger lot or a dedicated handicapped lot.
>
> amenity=parking
> capacity:disabled=yes or number of spaces.

I would think the actual location of the spots would be important,
especially when there's a point of interest at each end of the parking
lot.

On Sun, Aug 29, 2010 at 2:09 AM, John Smith <deltafoxtrot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 29 August 2010 15:04, Nathan Edgars II <nerou...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Is building=pavilion correct for a roof with no walls?
>
> To me pavilions have walls, is this another cultural issue?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Z%C3%BCrich_-_B%C3%BCrkliplatz_IMG_0525_ShiftN.jpg
(or something less fancy) is what I think of a pavilion as.
http://apps.ocfl.net/dept/cesrvcs/parks/parkdetails.asp?parkid=66
agrees that the park has "rental pavilions" (second icon in the
amenity list).
>
>> Is there a way to distinguish an older gnarly tree suitable for
>> climbing from a recently-planted tree?
>
> Are some people wanting to do the tree equivalent of a pub crawl or something?
>
> I'm trying to see the benefit in going out of my way to tag trees at
> all, let alone something like this...

It seems to be the same difference between natural=wood and
landuse=forest. In one case they left the old natural trees, while in
the other they planted new trees (usually palm trees around here). If
you have a bench next to a tree, the former is likely to provide more
shade.

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