this post was submitted on 28 Sep 2024
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Bloomington Indiana

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I just added some max_speed= tags for #OpenStreetMap in Bloomington, Indiana.

Our city code has a default speed limit 25 mph. Exceptions are published in a table in the city code.

It seems possible that adding the correct lower-than-default speed limits from city code to OpenStreetMap could reduce the likelihood that routing algorithms would route car traffic there, which could in turn keep the street safer for other road users.

Ref: https://library.municode.com/in/bloomington/codes/code/_of/_ordinances?nodeId=TIT15VETR%5C_CH15.24SPRE

@bloomington_in

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[–] markstos@urbanists.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@pleaseclap @DemonHusky @bloomington_in I’ve looked at the code. My servers have bike routing coverage for most of the US and EU with the OpenTripPlanner and Valhalla engines. Occasionally we find edge cases that don’t route optimally and look into patches.

Lots of roads don’t have max speeds in OpenStreetMap which they both use, so other signals are essential.

[–] pleaseclap@urbanists.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@markstos @DemonHusky @bloomington_in

You've seen your specialty bike routing algorithms. I'm glad they're good algorithms, however

your first post is about misrepresenting speed limits in OpenStreetMap (which is a community resource, yes?) to effect driver behavior, and what systemic effects this would have for every user of every tool that uses OpenStreetMap

Even if you don't think this will lead to congestion on the same roads, I'm not sure it's ethical