Tag:bicycle=use sidepath

bicycle=use_sidepath
Description
Compulsory cycleway aside 
Group: Restrictions
Used on these elements
Useful combination
Status: approved

This tag bicycle=use_sidepath applies only to roads with a classification that allows cycling generally. When a road has a parallel compulsory cycleway (e.g. (DE, PL), (DE, FI, IT, PL), (NL) or (several European countries) this tag can be applied. But only when this road does not have a traffic sign which explicitly forbids bicycling (e.g. or ). In that case use bicycle=no.

This tag should only be applied in countries that have compulsory cycleways.

Please do not use bicycle=use_sidepath in combination with cycleway=track or cycleway=lane on the main highway, if there is no separate cycleway drawn on the map.
This is confusing for routing engines because bicycle=use_sidepath indicates not to route on the main highway (use the separate cycleway) and this conflicts with the tags cycleway=track and cycleway=lane, which indicates that bicycles are allowed to route on (bike lanes connected to) the main highway. See Osmose for reported problems on this.

Legal and access implications may and will vary between countries. The implications of these traffic signs on many specials vehicles and situations varies so much that it would need a lot of new tags to express this in OSM. There is no need to do this if the legal situation is clear. With a new country specific access scheme (=concept) on compulsory cycleways and their parallel roads it should give routers and renderers enough information for any type of vehicle/situation.

Note that in some cases cyclist may be allowed to use bicycle=use_sidepath ways while not allowed to use bicycle=no ways in any case at all. For example in Poland in general cyclist is not allowed to use road if parallel cycleway exists, unless it is unavoidable to go in some direction.

How to tag

This tag applies to ways where a separate (cycle)way is drawn.

bicycle=use_sidepath

cycleway=separate (cycleway:left=separate / cycleway:right=separate / cycleway:both=separate variants) indicates, that there a separate (cycle)way is drawn. But it does not make any statement about whether that separately mapped cycle path is compulsory or not. bicycle=use_sidepath implies that there is a separately mapped cycle path nearby, but not where it is, so cycleway:left=separate, cycleway:right=separate or cycleway:both=separate can still be used to indicate position of the cycleway.

To indicate a one-way compulsory cycleway use a directional subkey, e.g. bicycle:forward=use_sidepath. Choose between :forward and :backward depending on the compulsory cycle direction relative to the direction of the OSM way for the main road. The cycleways OSM direction is not important.

In some cases a two-way cycleway may be compulsory only in one direction. In the opposite direction cyclists are free to choose between the main road and the cycleway. Handle this case like a one-way compulsory cycleway.

For more in-depth information see this tags proposal Proposed_features/use_sidepath.

Examples

PictureTags

This cycleway is compulsory.
Cycleway:
highway=cycleway
(implicit:bicycle=designated)

Main road:
bicycle=use_sidepath
 (NL)
or
 (FR, AT)
or
 or  (DE)
These cycleways are not compulsory.
Cycling is allowed on the adjacent roads, too.
Cycleway:
highway=cycleway
Possible additional tags:
  • tags that show that the cycleway is not compulsory
  • mofa=* tags.

In this street, cycling is explicitly not
allowed
on the "road" (carriageway).
highway=*
bicycle=no (explicit bicycle ban)

On both the German ((in English)) and the Dutch forum have compulsory cycleways been discussed.

Supportmap

This tag is supported on the "Bicycle tags on OSM"- map.

Statistics

bicycle=use_sidepath
bicycle:forward=use_sidepath    bicycle:backward=use_sidepath

See also

This article is issued from Openstreetmap. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.