That is a most interesting question. Here in Thailand I interpret their differences, perhaps incorrectly, as residential meaning a way with houses on it, while an unclassified highway is one step below a tertiary and therefore one step above a residential. It does not have many houses (residences) and is often a connector between minor towns or villages. Which is more important? In my opinion, an unclassified highway would offer faster transit times than a residential so I'm surprised to learn that routers rate them the same.
It's a tricky distinction. I hope this thread will help clarify that distinction. On Wed, Feb 20, 2019 at 4:24 PM Florian Lohoff <f...@zz.de> wrote: > > Hi, > i found some changesets downgrading streets to unclassified. After some > discussions the mapper were under the impression that unclassified is > something higher priority than residential. > > From my long tagging practice in OSM unclassified and residential are > identical in respect to priority. (And e.g. OSRM treats them equal) > The first is used as a connecting road off city limits. The latter is > used for the lowest class roads within city boundarys (Where there is > residential usage) > > So for me retagging residential to unclassified is broken under the > assumption that unclassified is something "better" than residential. > > It is even more broken when there is residential usage in which case > unclassified is inappropriate. > > While discussing i found that there was some modification to the German > version of unclassified not saying that unclassified is something > "better" but suggesting that an unclassified should be dragged into > city limits until the next higher class street. This lets user > assume that unclassified is some higher priority than residential. > > > I was treating those streets identical for the last 10+ years and only > the city limits gave the indication whether to use unclassified or > residential. > > Am i wrong with that usage? > > Flo > -- > Florian Lohoff f...@zz.de > UTF-8 Test: The 🐈 ran after a 🐁, but the 🐁 ran away > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging > -- Dave Swarthout Homer, Alaska Chiang Mai, Thailand Travel Blog at http://dswarthout.blogspot.com
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