Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7446120 Journal of Cultural Heritage 2018 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The documentation of cultural heritage is acknowledged as a fundamental instrument to guarantee the monument preservation and promotion, and to educate people towards these aims. The recently evolved potentialities of information technologies and communication (standard data models, ontologies and formats, web technologies) permit the development of digital archives in which the information is also semantically specified in a shared and explicit way, so that it can be universally understood and correctly interpreted. However, some tools are missing for suitably archiving and communicating the architectural heritage information, including the representation potentialities of high-level-of-detail 3D models. A goal of this study is the suitable representation of both the thematic information about architectural heritage and its 3D geometric characteristics in an interoperable and understandable way. For this reason, the existing data models, available for the geometric and cartographic field, and for the cultural heritage domain, were considered. They are distinct standards, and some limits make them incomplete (in the spatial or semantic management). In this study, an extension is proposed of the standard data model CityGML to overcome these limits. CityGML is published by the Open Geospatial Consortium to represent urban objects and permits a multi-scale management of the information useful for the representation of architectural heritage multi-faceted, multi-temporal, complex knowledge. In the paper, the extension is described, and an example of its application on a portion of a highly detailed 3D model of a mediaeval church is presented.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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