Say, a book store with a café. Or a place that is a café by day and a wine bar by night.
a book store with a café
This is easy because the tags don’t overlap.
shop=books amenity=cafe
a café by day and a wine bar by night
I saw something like this before, and they are usually two businesses with different names. I used two separated POIs (points) placed in the same building area to denote them. In this way, I can also put different names, opening_hours etc to the two POIs.
In the case of the café/bar, they are distinctly the same place. It’s actually something I’ve run across several times in different places, usually they’re more upscale than your typical café. Pretty good venue for a date that you’re not sure how long you want it to last!
it is common practice in the u.s., at least, to use two nodes for big chain drugstores, where the shop, marked chemist, often has wildly different hours from the pharmacy. they have the same name and much of the same info
I would do a node with the following tags:
amenity = cafe
amenity = bar
opening_hours:bar = Mo-Fr 19:00-02:00
opening_hours:cafe = Mo-Fr 09:00-18:00Read more here:
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:barI have asked myself the same question a few times. A very common combination here is also shoemaker + key service in one person.
Seems to me that the data validations should be designed to only present a conflict if you have a business operating in the same place at the same time as another business.
This enables mixed-use scheduling, and it also allows the system to retain historical data about businesses that are completely replaced by other businesses, allowing for viewing of older snapshots of the map.
That being said, I have no idea what this sub is or what we’re discussing.
OP is trying to accurately tag a location they were adding to OpenStreetMap, an open source alternative to services like Google Maps. The conflict arose because currently, the location can only have one tag applied to it, but the business serves multiple purpose as the same entity under the same name, which complicates the ability to accurately tag it.
Ah good so I understood the situation perfectly. Now read my comment as if I knew that.