this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2023
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I would say that something like cobblestone could be called seamless if the overall 'pattern' flows throughout, and there isn't any obvious place where it breaks. It's not so much "more than the expected number" of seams, because there would be a seam there anyway, but a bigger picture idea of two separate stretches of cobblestone pattern meeting versus one unbroken cobblestone pattern.
Yes, it's rougher terrain, by definition, because it's less smooth.
It has rough surfaces and smooth surfaces. Since the surfaces are otherwise perfect, they have no cracks.
If there are cracks and potholes, it's clearly not perfect, so don't rate it as such regardless of the ease of finding a path. It's also not bumpy, because it's flat and smooth. You should rate it something like "mostly flat and smooth, but has some cracks and potholes in a few localized spots." Probably 4/5, going off your description.
Thank you! I'm trying to get a feel how other people answer these questions. So this was very helpful for me!
Not a problem. To elaborate on 3:
The place where the tactile pavement meets the regular pavement is a seam (the line where 2 things are joined into 1), not a crack (the line where 1 thing breaks into 2). The described path would have 8 seams at the places you mentioned, because there would be a tactile strip at each descent from and ascent onto curb, totalling 4, and each strip is surrounded by a seam that the pedestrian crosses twice, once entering the strip and once leaving.