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|style="vertical-align: top;" | Freeway | |style="vertical-align: top;" | Freeway | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |"Mxx N/S/E/W" | |style="vertical-align: top;" |"Mx/Mxx N/S/E/W" | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |L3 | |style="vertical-align: top;" |L3 | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Motorways. Example: "M18 S" | |style="vertical-align: top;" | Motorways. Example: "M18 S": | ||
* Signs to motorways or on motorways are blue, except where they refer to other roads. | |||
* Most (but not all) motorways just have two lanes in each direction. | |||
* Some motorways terminate in a roundabout(!) | |||
* Most interchanges are grade-separated. | |||
* Default speed limit is 120km/h, unless signs say otherwise. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Major Highway | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Major Highway | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |"Nxx | |style="vertical-align: top;" |"Nx/Nxx N/S/E/W” for dual carriageways, “Nxx” or “Nxx <name>” for two-way roads. | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |L2 | |style="vertical-align: top;" |L2 | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |National primary & national secondary roads. Examples: "N72", "N11 N" and "N4 Main St". | |style="vertical-align: top;" |National primary & national secondary roads. Examples: "N72", "N11 N" and "N4 Main St". | ||
* Can be dual carriageway or two-way roads. | |||
* May form part of a normal street in a city. | |||
* Signs to N-roads are green, except where they refer to other roads. | |||
* Dual carriageways can have two or three lanes in either direction. | |||
* Default speed limit is 100km/h, unless signs say otherwise, dropping to 60km/h on the approach to cities and usually 50km/h within cities. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Minor Highway | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Minor Highway | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" |“Rxxx N/S/E/W” for dual carriageways, “Rxxx” or “Rxxx <name>” for two-way roads. | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |L2 | |style="vertical-align: top;" |L2 | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Regional roads link towns to each other, and to more major roads. Examples: "R772", "R772 E" and "R234 Main St". | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Regional roads link towns to each other, and to more major roads. Examples: "R772", "R772 E" and "R234 Main St". | ||
* Usually two-way roads and sometimes dual carriageways, especially in larger cities. | |||
* Some very busy junctions may be grade-separated. | |||
* May form part of a normal street in a city. | |||
* Signs referring to regional routes are white with black text. | |||
* Default speed limit is 80km/h, unless signs say otherwise, dropping to 60km/h on the approach to cities and usually 50km/h within cities. | |||
* Occasionally, where the road was formerly part of an N-road that was replaced by a motorway, speed limit will still be 100km/h and older signs will suggest that the R-road has the number of the N-road that was replaced by a nearby motorway. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Ramp | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Ramp | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" | | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Entrance and exit roads of motorways. Examples: "J8 > R124", "J8 > R134 Athy, Cork", "J8" and "to M50 N". | * Exit ramps: “Jxx <road number (and name, if shown) on the sign> > <City names listed on the sign separated by comma>“ — for example: “J3 R125 > Ashbourne, Swords” | ||
* Entry ramps: “to <road name>” — for example: “to M50 N” | |||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Entrance and exit roads of motorways and dual carriageways. Examples: "J8 > R124", "J8 > R134 Athy, Cork", "J8" and "to M50 N". | |||
* Can be referred to as either “junction” or “exit”. | |||
* Usually numbered on motorways and N-roads. | |||
* Speed limit typically shifts once part way between the limits of the roads (or interchange) at either end. For example: 120↔60 | |||
* Speed limit sometimes shifts twice when there’s a very tight curve (as part of a partial cloverleaf interchange). For example: 50→30→100 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Primary Street | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Primary Street | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" |“Lxxxx/Lxxxxx” where the L-number (local road number) is known and is shown on a sign at the end of the road, “Lxxxx <name>” or just “<name>” where the name is known. Where no other name is known, named after the townland through which it passes (see “Townlands” in the section about naming). | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" | | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |"Main" streets in towns and cities as well as rural roads (other than R roads) that are important connectors with a high traffic volume. Two cars must be able to pass without having to slow down. The road should not be a cul-de-sac. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry". | |style="vertical-align: top;" |"Main" streets in towns and cities as well as rural roads (other than R roads) that are important connectors with a high traffic volume. Two cars must be able to pass without having to slow down. The road should not be a cul-de-sac. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry". | ||
* Usually two-way roads (no matter how narrow) and occasionally dual-carriageway. | |||
* Default speed limit is 80km/h outside cities, dropping to 60km/h on the approach to cities and usually 50km/h within cities. Many cities are increasing their use of 30km/h in some areas, especially city centres and residential estates. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Street | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Street | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" |“Lxxxx/Lxxxxx” where the L-number (local road number) is known and is shown on a sign at the end of the road, “Lxxxx <name>” or just “<name>” where the name is known. Where no other name is known, named after the townland through which it passes (see “Townlands” in the section about naming). | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" | | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Default road type. Most streets and rural roads. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry". | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Default road type. Most streets and rural roads. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry". | ||
* Usually two-way roads (no matter how narrow) and occasionally dual-carriageway. | |||
* Default speed limit is 80km/h outside cities, dropping to 60km/h on the approach to cities and usually 50km/h within cities. Many cities are increasing their use of 30km/h in some areas, especially city centres and residential estates. | |||
|- | |- | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Narrow Street | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Narrow Street | ||
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|style="vertical-align: top;" | | |style="vertical-align: top;" | | ||
|style="vertical-align: top;" |Roads of car parks and petrol stations. Note: not every lane of a car park should be mapped, but only entrances, exits and main routes within the car park. | |style="vertical-align: top;" |Roads of car parks and petrol stations. Note: not every lane of a car park should be mapped, but only entrances, exits and main routes within the car park. | ||
* Map the minimal amount of segments required to allow navigation into and out of the car park | |||
* Name the entry segments with the name of the parking lot so that TTS will give a useful message, for example: “turn left into Lidl” | |||
|} | |} | ||
<p><b>Summary:</b> motorways are Freeways, N-roads are Major Highways, R-roads are Minor Highways, major local roads are Primary Streets, all other surfaced local roads are Streets (except for special roads like Private Roads, Parking Lot Roads, and Narrow Streets).</p> | <p><b>Summary:</b> motorways are Freeways, N-roads are Major Highways, R-roads are Minor Highways, major local roads are Primary Streets, all other surfaced local roads are Streets (except for special roads like Private Roads, Parking Lot Roads, and Narrow Streets).</p> |
Revision as of 18:28, 13 January 2019
[ [ DRAFT ] ] <-----------
Introduction
This page should be read in conjunction with the page about Best Map Editing Practice, which covers the editing principles common to Waze map editing in all parts of the world. The purpose of this page is to describe standard practice in Ireland and how it differs from standard practice in other countries.
In case of any questions about road naming in Ireland, please start or join a discussion in the Ireland section of the forum. For any questions about map editing in general, first study the wiki, then search the Map Editing section of the forum, and then, if necessary, ask questions in that section of the forum.
Conventions used in this document
- The word “city” is used in the Waze context: it may be an actual city, it may be a town of any size, or it may be a small village that just has a pub/shop/post office/school and a couple of houses.
- When describing road naming:
- A capital letter followed by a number of ‘x’ characters implies that letter followed by the number of digits corresponding to the number of ‘x’ characters shown. For example, Rxxx implies an ‘R’ followed by exactly three digits.
- "[thing]" means that something should be included if it is known. For example, "[Lxxx] Main Rd" means that the name "Main Rd" should be preceded with its L-road number.
- A slash (‘/’) separating two parts of the road name description implies just one of the elements separated by ‘/’ characters. For example, N/S/E/W implies an ‘N’ or an ‘S’ or an ‘E’ or a ‘W’.
- “<name>” implies that the name of something (such as a street name) should form part of the road name at this position.
- Spaces in the road name description should be inserted into the road name verbatim.
Road Types
Waze Road Type | Naming | Lock | Irish Road Type |
---|---|---|---|
Freeway | "Mx/Mxx N/S/E/W" | L3 | Motorways. Example: "M18 S":
|
Major Highway | "Nx/Nxx N/S/E/W” for dual carriageways, “Nxx” or “Nxx <name>” for two-way roads. | L2 | National primary & national secondary roads. Examples: "N72", "N11 N" and "N4 Main St".
|
Minor Highway | “Rxxx N/S/E/W” for dual carriageways, “Rxxx” or “Rxxx <name>” for two-way roads. | L2 | Regional roads link towns to each other, and to more major roads. Examples: "R772", "R772 E" and "R234 Main St".
|
Ramp |
|
Entrance and exit roads of motorways and dual carriageways. Examples: "J8 > R124", "J8 > R134 Athy, Cork", "J8" and "to M50 N".
| |
Primary Street | “Lxxxx/Lxxxxx” where the L-number (local road number) is known and is shown on a sign at the end of the road, “Lxxxx <name>” or just “<name>” where the name is known. Where no other name is known, named after the townland through which it passes (see “Townlands” in the section about naming). | "Main" streets in towns and cities as well as rural roads (other than R roads) that are important connectors with a high traffic volume. Two cars must be able to pass without having to slow down. The road should not be a cul-de-sac. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry".
| |
Street | “Lxxxx/Lxxxxx” where the L-number (local road number) is known and is shown on a sign at the end of the road, “Lxxxx <name>” or just “<name>” where the name is known. Where no other name is known, named after the townland through which it passes (see “Townlands” in the section about naming). | Default road type. Most streets and rural roads. Examples: "L4321 Joseph Rd", "L5432 Ballingarry", "L6789", "Joseph Rd" and "Ballingarry".
| |
Narrow Street | Use this road type with extra care as it will add a 10 second routing penalty for cars and taxis (no penalty for motorcycles) | ||
Off-road | Roads that are not suitable for normal cars.
Note: Use a regular Street road type with the unpaved attribute checked If the road is unpaved and possible to drive. | ||
Private Road | Roads that are not open to the general public. E.g. college campuses, large businesses, golf clubs and gated developments | ||
Parking Lot Road | Roads of car parks and petrol stations. Note: not every lane of a car park should be mapped, but only entrances, exits and main routes within the car park.
|
Summary: motorways are Freeways, N-roads are Major Highways, R-roads are Minor Highways, major local roads are Primary Streets, all other surfaced local roads are Streets (except for special roads like Private Roads, Parking Lot Roads, and Narrow Streets).
Naming explanation: Anything in [square brackets] should be included if it is known and appropriate. Anything in <angle brackets> must be included.
Towns, cities and villages
Roads that do not form part of a town, city or village should have no city specified. Roads that do form part of a town, city or village (or run past its edge) should have the name of that settlement specified. Larger cities (such as Cork and Dublin) use the names of their suburbs as the city name for roads in those suburbs.
Waze only allows one town, city or village with the same name in each country. For duplicate city names, the county name can be appended in brackets after the city name. For example, there is a "Blackwater" in Co Clare, but a "Blackwater (Wexford)" in Co Wexford. Ideally the larger city should be the one without brackets, but sometimes it will be simpler for it to be the city that was named first, because renaming cities is not easy.
Road Names for Numbered Roads
If you are adding a local name to a numbered road then the number should be first and separated from the name by a space, for example: "R126 Hearse Rd"
Rural local roads that don't have any specific name of their own should be named after the townland they run through. If a road has an L-number sign at its end, then that road's L-number can be added to the road name. For example: "L8859 Ballytarsna". Even though L-road numbers aren't unique, having the number be part of the road name is useful to Waze users to verify that they're turning onto the right road.
Motorway Carriageway Naming Convention
Whenever possible, on split roads, name carriageways with the nominal direction of travel. This should be in line with the signs (do not use the direction the road goes in). Insert the nominal direction at the end of the road name, separated by a space; for example:
- M1 N
- M50 S
This makes traffic and incident reports much more useful and helps with navigation. Note that the direction of travel applied for the entire motorway and does not change as the motorway bends. For example, the M50 in Dublin just has an "M50 N" and an "M50 S", even though parts of it travel east-west. This applies to most other long motorways too.
Abbreviations
Waze convention is to use suffix abbreviations in street names. In Ireland, only the entries in the table below should be abbreviated.
Notes
- Abbreviate only suffixes:
- "North Road Business Park" should not be abbreviated.
- "Park West Road" is abbreviated "Park West Rd", not "Pk W Rd".
- "The Avenue", "The Green", etc. should not be abbreviated.
- Abbreviations do not contain any punctuation, such as "." (full-stops) or "-" (hyphens) except "Saint" abbreviated "St.".
- Cardinals "North", "East", "South", "West" are always abbreviated after road numbers in divided dual carriageways or after street names:
- M50 N
- N92 N Park West Rd
- R811 South Circular Rd ("South" is part of the street name)
- R132 Parnell Sq E
- R138 St. Stephen's Green E ("Green" is not in the abbreviation table)
- "Lower" and "Upper" are always abbreviated:
- R114 Camden St Lwr
- Upr Kimmage Rd
- If your question is not answered here, please ask in forums.
Legend
Road name | Abbreviation |
---|---|
Avenue | Ave |
Close | Cl |
Court | Ct |
Crescent | Cres |
Drive | Dr |
East | E |
Junction | J |
Lane | Ln |
Lower | Lwr |
North | N |
Park | Pk |
Place | Pl |
Road | Rd |
Saint | St |
South | S |
Square | Sq |
Street | St |
Terrace | Tce |
Upper | Upr |
West | W |