> Uncontrolled crossings are by far the most common. They are wherever there are drop kerbs, which in my town just about every road junction.
Please join our discussion of crossing=marked! On Wed, May 8, 2019 at 2:42 AM Philip Barnes <p...@trigpoint.me.uk> wrote: > On Wednesday, 8 May 2019, marc marc wrote: > > Le 08.05.19 à 01:30, Nick Bolten a écrit : > > > Unmarked crossings are abstract "fictions" > > > > beware of caricature : > > - unmarked pedestrian crossings with lowered kerb for wheelchairs > > - unmarked pedestrian crossing that connects a sidewalk on each side of > > the crossing > > > > just because you've never seen one before doesn't mean it's a fiction. > > > Absolutely Marc. > > Uncontrolled crossings are by far the most common. They are wherever there > are drop kerbs, which in my town just about every road junction. > > Needed for wheelchairs, pushchairs, people with limited mobility and me > occasionally when I need to get my wheeled suitcase to the station. > > It would be pointless to provide traffic lights in residential areas with > minimal traffic. > > Phil (trigpoint) > > -- > Sent from my Sailfish device > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >
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