Open awisemanapple opened 6 years ago
Just saw this one.
Nice to hear!
Though a little late and though I’m currently not that active in Benin, here my two cents:
Indeed we stick to “Highway tags Africa” – means: The “highway” tag is chosen following the importance of the road for the road network, and not following the current maintenance state of the road.
It is important to have the “surface” key (at least with the raw distinction between “paved” and ”unpaved”). As the ”highway” tag does not say much about the actual conditions, there can be a big difference between a secondary road that is paved and a secondary roads that’s unpaved. This information is really important to calculate the time it takes to use a certain road. The “surface” key is therefore as important as the “highway” key itself.
There is no motorway roads in Benin. I suppose trunk roads are quite complete in OSM. For the other road types you will find missing roads, maybe even for primary. Even important connection roads like primary roads are sometimes unpaved. The tracing quality is partially very bad, because some roads where traced from extremly-low-resolution landsat images. There is also a considerable number of roads that are badly aligned. Probably because the first contributors did not have GPS traces to align the satellite images. Fixing this would be great.
You might find places that seem like OSM errors, but are in fact correct. Places like Sô-Ava where you see a lot of houses without any road in OSM, no connection to the road framework, not even a well-defined ferry connection over the river. Or Ganvie where aren’t no roads either and furthermore the houses are in the water. It might sometimes seem strange, but that reflects indeed the situation on the ground. (I’ve been there 😊)
The most widespread road tagging error in Benin is likely tagging of normal unpaved roads as “highway=track”. “highway=track” should be used only for forestry and agricultural use, but currently it is often miss-used for unpaved roads in general (as it renders in brown in the standard style). This could be fixed by using an appropriate “highway” value (often “unclassified”) together with “surface=unpaved”.
Don’t worry about roads that have no names in OSM. Almost all roads in Benin do not have a name on the ground!
Satellite image quality varies. It is worth to try various satellite images for the same place, there are often big differences. During much time, we had no satellite images with good resolutions. The good-resolution coverage of Bing was limited to the centre of Cotonou. In 2016 there was a crowd-sourcing for buying a satellite image not only for the centre of Cotonou, but also the the outskirts and some parts of Grand-Popo. The resolution and the alignment is a little worse than Bing, but the image is more up-to-date. It is available in JOSM and iD be default. Still today it is more up-to-date than Bing. It’s worth considering it. However, DigitalGlobe Premium and Esri have now new high-resolution images also.
GPS traces are rare in Benin.
The region where is most construction work going on is around Cotonou: Not in the centre of, but in the outskirts. The agglomeration is growing fast. Of particular interest might be:
Thanks for contributing in Benin. You’re welcome!
Best regards
Lukas Sommer
Task Description
This task outlines work to improve map data in Benin. We plan to work on improving the road network, such as adding missing roads, fixing network issues such as missing connections or crossing roads, and other related issues. We also plan to update and correct coastline and water features as we find them, and correct and improve land use and land cover polygons where needed, such as airports, national parks, forests, colleges and universities, and so on -- remove duplicates, correct the boundaries, fix incorrect tags and other similar things.
Improvements that will be addressed include the following:
Mapping Guidelines
The team will follow OSM, regional and local policy, along with any other guidelines as appropriate.
For water and coastlines, the team will follow OSM coastline guidelines, waterways policy such as water and natural=water and local policy along with any other policy as appropriate. Some coastlines are connected to administrative boundaries, in which case we will adjust both if appropriate Where we see them, we will remove the
source=PGS
tag, which was from an earlier coastline import that needs to be cleaned up. We received a message on the India coastlines project requesting this, and it is commonly done in other coastline improvement edits.The team will use the imagery and data sources specified below for mapping in Benin.
When in doubt, the team will use the existing tags and data which are used locally. The history in JOSM (ctrl-H) identifies what previous mappers added and their notes and/or explanations regarding changes made. This history can also show if a previous mapper has visited that area or has expert knowledge or sources.
Our team uses the hashtag #adt (for Apple Data Team) for our edits.
Area of Focus
Throughout Benin.
Tools
The team will use JOSM for completing the task. JOSM has validation warnings for road networks and other possible issues that are important to prevent improper changes.
Sources
The team will apply image offsets as needed.
Changeset Comments
The team will provide changeset comments that are in compliance with OSM changeset guidelines.
Error Detection
The team will check for errors visually and using JOSM validation warnings prior to committing the changeset.
In addition, the team will review its work in accordance with validation guidelines such as the OSM Wiki and LearnOSM validation guidelines
Contributors
MapRoulette
We have also posted MapRoulette challenges related to the road network: https://maproulette.org/browse/projects/40690
For more information
Our community lead is Teddy Ahlvin and our editing leads are Jon Westlake and Erica Olson. To get in touch with Teddy, you can email or contact him via OSM. All of our leads can be reached via email.
OSM Wiki