1516
the arches, and more particularly the plaster
decoration of the vaults and the “iwans,” ata
very oblique angle in order to preclude gaps,
but nevertheless obtain complete and accu-
rate elevations, profiles, and cross-sections.
Analytical plotting methods are also used;
the advantages and limitations of these
methods are well known. Research is being
performed in Sweden and Denmark to
simplify their use and to rapidly obtain a
point-by-point survey. A drawing is then
made by a architect. Stability checks are an
important part of the application of analytical
methods; an example is offered by the suc-
cessive surveys made by the IGN on the
facade and narthex of the Abbey Church of St.
Denis, just outside Paris.
Experiments and works done with analyti-
cal plotters are increasing. The Historic Mon-
uments Survey Section of Canada (R. Letellier)
uses an AP/C plotter provided by the National
Research Council and finds the method ex-
tremely worthwhile. Atthe Turin Polytechnic
Institute, the plotter used is the Digital
Stereocartograph (DS). C. Sena thinks that
this system renders it far easier to form and
orient the model in difficult cases (e.g., the
amphitheatre at Susa), and the obtaining of
drawings or numerical data of different kinds
directly from the plotter is a simple matter.
The value of such devices in architectural
photogrammetry is obvious. While it is true
that, owing to their scarcity and cost, they as
yet belong to the luxury category of photo-
grammetry, there can be no doubt that in due
course such drawback will disappear and
they will come into general use, to the benefit
of architectural photogrammetry as a whole.
We mention also further experiments with
aerial photographs taken at very low altitude.
The IGN and the SFS in France and the Nara
Institute in Japan have taken photography
from a helicopter with the camera fitted onto a
stabilized platform; in Bulgaria a 210 mm
camera was used, in an AH-14 plane flying at
a height of 120 m and at a speed of 130 kms
per hour, to take photography at a scale of
1:600; and the Swedish Historical Monu-
ments Department and Uppsala University
have mounted a Hasselblad MK-70 camera in
a sports-model plane. The new Japanese
stereometric camera NAB-150 has been sus-
pended from a kite-balloon.
Finally, we should mention the increase in
the use of inverse photogrammetry for the
visual representation of proposed new build-
ings on photographed perspective views.
FIELDS OF APPLICATION
We should concentrate this subject on cer-
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE SENSING, 1975
tain given fields of application whose de-
velopment is particularly noticeable.
Surveys made for the preservation of
monuments in peril or as a prelude to the
transfer of monuments to a new site form a
very important category of application. The
most famous examples are those of the Tem-
ple of Borobudur (Indonesia) and of the
whole group of monuments at Philae (Egypt),
protected under UNESCO international
programs and surveyed by the French IGN.
Structural problems in monuments are a
sector of photogrammetric applications
which is expanding in size and now includes
studies of several different kinds. First, there
are the stability checks, already mentioned.
Next come the studies concerned with
equilibrium; an example is the detailed sur-
vey of the foundations of the church at
Deerhurst (8th and 11th centuries) by the
Royal Commission on Historical Monuments
(England), conducted in conjunction with ar-
chaeological excavations. We will also in-
clude the IGN survey of the Pantheon in
Paris, which has clearly brought out the distor-
tions produced in the lower portions during
construction and compensated for during the
building of the upper parts. The survey
should also provide a means for calculating
the thrust exerted by the immense dome on
the four central piers of the building. We
would mention, too, the work of the Warsaw
Geodesy Institute, which has re-established
the structura! features and shape of the
Wladyslaw Tower and the clock-tower of the
king's castle with the aid of old photographs.
The determination of geometrical charac-
teristics with as great a precision as possible
is an application closely linked to the study of
structures. It was assigned particular impor-
tance in the work carried out jointly by the
Turin Polytechnic Institute (G. Inghilieri and
C. Sena) and the University Institute of Ar-
chaeology (G. Gullini), whether in the case of
the Greek monuments of Sicily (proportions
and optical refinements); the Roman build-
ings, in which by surveying many cross-
sections photogrammetry can ascertain the
all-important internal spatial distribution; or
the ziggurats of Iraq. In this case, photo-
grammetry provided the means of com-
prehending the forms ofthe buildings, check-
ing the unit of measure used by the original
builders, and analyzing structural variations
between one story and the next.
In this matter, we should mention particu-
larly the study of the true forms of the in-
teriors of large domes. The works of the Of-
ficine Galileo (W. Ferri) and the Engineering
Faculty of Florence University (M. Fondelli)