Am Fr., 13. Sept. 2019 um 15:20 Uhr schrieb Dave F via Tagging < tagging@openstreetmap.org>:
> On 11/09/2019 14:50, Paul Allen wrote: > > > > I said that if it was a church and looks like a church then tag the > building as a church even if it now functions as something else. > > Buildings don't have a 'type'. There's no 'class', no standard > architectural style or size. A quick image search proves that. > maybe you should extend your search, and go beyond images ;-) The typology of buildings is for example a subject in architectural studies at the university ("Gebäudekunde"). You will find tens of thousands of books about building typology (usually each dealing with only a narrow topic, e.g. hotels, hospitals, office buildings, production buildings, specific types of apartment buildings, specific military buildings, etc.) A supermarket, prison church or townhall will typically by recognizable as such (with the exception of those that are built on purpose to not stand out), as will a hotel, an office or a residential building. Sure, you do not need an office building to set up an office, but this doesn't mean there aren't office buildings. buildings do have a type, but of course you're right, if you look at a very generic type like "residential" you will find all kind of dwellings and you won't recognize a common style or type. To recognize similarities, you'd have to go into more detail, e.g. terraced houses (that's clearly a kind of residential building type, with usually one unit per entrance (may be split now), a narrow garden to the back (usually), etc.). OSM "is a place for mapping things that are both real and current" > > 'building=*' is to indicate its current usage. > > no, its current building type. Cheers, Martin
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