Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 3)

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Pseudo-Grid Based Building Extraction Using Airborne LIDAR Data 
Woosug Cho **, Yoon-Seok Jwa®, Hwi-Jeong Chang ®, Sung-Hun Lee" 
* Associate Prof. Dept. of Civil Eng., Inha University, Inchon 402-751, KOREA - wcho&zinha.ac.kr 
? Graduate student, Dept. of Geoinformatic Eng., Inha University, Inchon, KOREA - 
oon1314@1ycos.co.kr 
  
KEY WORDS: LIDAR, Building Extraction, Building Detection, Airborne Laser Scanning, Pseudo-Grid 
ABSTRACT: 
This paper proposed a practical method for building detection and extraction using airborne laser scanning data. The proposed 
method consists mainly of two processes: low and high level processes. The major distinction from the previous approaches is that 
we introduce a concept of pseudo-grid (or binning) into raw laser scanning data to avoid the loss of information and accuracy due to 
interpolation as well as to define the adjacency of neighboring laser point data and to speed up the processing time. The approach 
begins with pseudo-grid generation, noise removal, segmentation, grouping for building detection, linearization and simplification of 
building boundary, and building extraction in 3D vector format. To achieve the efficient processing, each step changes the domain of 
input data such as point and pseudo-grid accordingly. The experimental results show that the proposed method is promising. 
1. INTRODUCTION 
In recent years, accurate 3D data in urban areas is in great 
demand for many applications such as urban planning, mobile 
communication, 3D city modeling and virtual reality. Usually 
urban areas are dynamically changing due to construction and 
extension of urban features, especially buildings. Detection and 
reconstruction of buildings are of highest interest in the 
geospatial community. Since manual digitizing is time 
consuming and very costly, a fast and automated method for 
detecting and extracting buildings is required by many users of 
geographic information system (Palmer, 2001). 
Airborne laser scanning is a relatively new and promising 
technology for obtaining Digital Surface Models (DSMs) with 
high density and high positional accuracy of the earth surface. 
The development of airborne laser scanning started in the 1970s 
(Schenk, 1999). Airborne laser scanning system comprised of 
laser scanner, GPS receiver and IMU computes the range to the 
target point by emitting a laser pulse and measuring the round- 
trip time. Contrary to the passive sensor such as optical sensor, 
the laser scanner is an active sensor so that it works day and 
night, and is less affected by the shadow and weather condition 
(Baltsavias, 1999). 
A number of research works have been performed on building 
detection and reconstruction from airborne laser scanning data 
in automated fashion. Wang (1998) used the shape information 
to separate buildings from all other objects based an assumption 
that most buildings have simple and regular shapes and other 
objects do not have. The shape information is obtained from 
edges detected on the elevation image in regular grid that is 
converted from laser data. In Maas and Vosselman(1999), the 
authors presented two techniques for determining parameters of 
gable roof type building models from laser altimetry data. Both 
techniques work on the original laser scanner data points 
without the requirement of an interpolation to a regular grid. 
Wang and Schenk (2000) reported an approach that takes high 
quality terrain surface data generated by airborne laser scanning 
data as input and goes through edge detection, edge 
classification, building points extraction, TIN model generation, 
and building reconstruction to extract and reconstruct buildings 
and building related information. For building detection, it 
detects edges from the surface data and classifies edges to 
distinguish building edges from other edges based on their 
geometry and shapes including orthogonality, parallelism, 
circularity and symmetry. Morgan and Tempfli (2000) 
developed a procedure starting by resampling elevation as 
obtained by laser scanning into regular grid. The core part of 
building detection is based on a morphological filter for 
distinguishing between terrain and non-terrain segments. The 
non-terrain segments are classified into building or vegetation. 
In Morgan and Habib(2001), the authors generated a 3D TIN 
structure using the irregularly distributed laser data for building 
detection and extraction. The 3D TIN is generated to serve the 
detection of the building facades including the vertical walls. 
Elaksher and Bethel (2002) utilized the geometric properties of 
urban building for the reconstruction of the building wire- 
frames from the LiDAR data. The approach started by finding 
the candidate building points that are used to populate a plane 
parameter space and followed by filling the plane parameter 
space, extracting roof regions and refining the plane parameters. 
Finally, the region boundaries are extracted and used to form 
the building wire-frames. 
In this paper, we propose a practical method for building 
detection and extraction in urban areas. The proposed method 
consists mainly of two processes: low and high level processes. 
The major distinction from the previous approaches is that we 
introduce a concept of pseudo-grid (or binning) into raw laser 
scanning data to avoid the loss of information and accuracy due 
to interpolation as well as to define the adjacency of 
neighboring laser point data and to speed up the processing time. 
The practical approach proposed in the paper begins with 
pseudo-grid creation, noise removal, segmentation, grouping for 
building detection, linearization and simplification of building 
boundary, and building extraction in 3D vector format. To 
achieve the efficient processing, each step listed above changes 
the domain of input data such as point and pseudo-grid 
accordingly. Figure 1 illustrates the schematic diagram of the 
practical approach for building detection and extraction 
proposed in this paper. 
    
    
      
   
    
   
  
    
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
    
   
   
   
   
   
    
   
    
   
   
   
   
   
    
    
     
   
   
    
   
    
    
   
  
  
    
    
  
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