As an American, I would not consider "fontanella bolsena" ( https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/File:Fontanella_Bolsena.jpg) to be a drinking fountain, it appears to be a public drinking water "tap" (though in American English we would usually call it a faucet or spigot).
On Sun, Oct 9, 2022 at 2:14 PM Mateusz Konieczny via Tagging < [email protected]> wrote: > > > > Oct 4, 2022, 15:14 by [email protected]: > > > > sent from a phone > > On 4 Oct 2022, at 14:46, Mateusz Konieczny via Tagging < > [email protected]> wrote: > > Also, ones in Rome that I have seen mostly had downward flow. > > > > the typical, mostly deployed types in Rome (nasone and roman_wolf) are > both providing a method to change to upward flow (there’s a hole on top of > the tube and when you tap the outlet the water jets out there) > > Oh, I was unaware of this. That would make my life easier during my visit > there. > > So nasone/roman_wolf style water provider with downward flow only - would > it > be a drinking fountain? > > Or lets take > https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/File:Fontanella_Bolsena.jpg > illustrating fountain=drinking and seemingly without upward flow: > is it a drinking fountain? > > If no - should we rename fountain=drinking? Or remove it as an example > at https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:fountain ? > > If yes - why > > https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/File:Water_flowing_from_drinking_water_tap.jpg > would not be a water fountain? > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >
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