[OSM-talk-ie] Bar v pub

Rory McCann rory at technomancy.org
Thu Jun 22 15:22:48 UTC 2017


Hi all,

For the differentiating rule is based on the osm-carto style choice. Is 
the normal drink there a pint? Then it's a pub. Is it a cocktail? Then 
it's a bar.

Though it's not too important. In Hiberno-English the terms are used 
interchangibly. Perhaps in the UK with their brewery pubs and free 
houses it's different. The vast majority of the instances in Ireland are 
pubs, not bars (we love our pints).

I don't think there's a clear, defined difference between bar & pub. 
There are edge cases in Ireland (and I think UK). So maybe tell the 
Spanish community that.

Like many things in OSM, there are many right answers. :) We'll never 
get anything 100%.

Rory

On 22/06/17 14:50, Alan Grant wrote:
> Let me start by introducing myself as I have not posted on talk-ie before.
> I am Irish but live abroad and generally follow the Spanish (talk-es)
> mailing list.
> 
> There is a rather intense debate taking place at the moment on talk-es (31
> posts and still going) about whether a typical Spanish neighbourhood bar
> should be tagged as amenity=bar, pub, or cafe. Some participants seem to
> assume that the bar-pub distinction is clearly defined in English (and
> specifically in the English OSM wiki) and that the issue is how to map that
> distinction to Spain.
> 
> I am posting here because I wondered about whether Irish mappers do in fact
> think this distinction is well-defined and useful. It seems to me that in
> Ireland at least we often use "pub" and "bar" almost interchangeably -
> hence pub names such as "The Harbour Bar". Looking at the wiki some of the
> criteria seem rather vague or of doubtful relevance - should it matter to
> the definition of an amenity if the building that houses it happens to be
> modern or purpose-built? What about the suggestion that food is normally
> available in pubs - I seem to remember that when I was young many pubs
> served little more in the way of food than packets of crisps, does that
> mean they were then bars but have become pubs as they diversified into
> serving food to the lunchtime crowd?
> 
>  From taginfo the pub tag vastly outnumbers the bar tag in Ireland. Looking
> at places tagged as bar, many of them do not seem much different to their
> neighbours tagged as pubs as far as I can see.
> 
> I suppose I am really asking out of curiosity rather than with any definite
> aim, but any thoughts would be welcome.
> 
> Alan
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