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3D MODELING AND VISUALIZATION OF LARGE CULTURAL HERITAGE SITES AT
VERY HIGH RESOLUTION: THE BAMIYAN VALLEY AND ITS STANDING BUDDHAS
Armin Gruen, Fabio Remondino, Li Zhang
Institute for Geodesy and Photogrammetry, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
E-mail: <agruen><fabio><zhangl>@geod.baug.ethz.ch
Commission V - WG 6
KEY WORDS: Cultural Heritage, SPOT, IKONOS, Reconstruction, Modeling, Texture, Visualization
ABSTRACT
In this paper we present the modeling and visualization of the cultural heritage area of Bamiyan, Afghanistan. The region is situated
ca 200 km north-west of Kabul and it was one of the major Buddhist centres until the ninth century AD. The two stazding Buddhas
belonged to some of the most famous Buddhist monuments world-wide. In 2001 they were destroyed through an act of vandalism by
the Taleban militia. In our previous reports we have already presented the 3D computer reconstruction of the Great Buddha while in
this contribution we will describe the terrain modeling of the surrounding area from satellite images, the 3D reconstruction of the
entire rock cliff of Bamiyan and the modeling of the two empty niches where the Buddha statues once stood.
1. INTRODUCTION
The region of Bamiyan, ca 200 km North-West of Kabul,
Afghanistan, was one of the major Buddhist centres from the
second century AD up to the time when Islam entered the arca
in the ninth century. For centuries, Bamiyan lay in the heart of
the famous Silk Road, offering rest to caravans carrying goods
across the area between China and Western Empires.
Strategically situated in a central location for travellers from
North to South and East to West, Bamiyan was a common
meeting place for many ancient cultures. In the region, many
Buddha statues and a hundreds of caves were carved out of the
sedimentary rock. In particular, near the village of Bamiyan, at
2600 meters altitude, there were three big statues of Buddha
carved out of a vertical cliff (Figure 1). The famous standing
Buddha statues, as well as other small statues in Foladi and
Kakrak have been destroyed by the Taleban militia in March
2001 (Figure 2, left).
In 2003, the World Heritage Committee has decided to include
the cultural landscape and archaeological remains of the
Bamiyan valley in the UNESCO World Heritage List
[http://whe.unesco.org/]. The whole area is in a fragile state of
conservation as it has suffered from abandonment, military
actions and explosions. The major dangers are the risk of
imminent collapse of the Buddha niches with the remaining
fragments of the statues, further deterioration of still existing
mural paintings in the caves, looting and illicit excavation.
pu ¥ *
Figure 1: Panorama of the Bamiyan cliff with the three Buddha
statues prior to demolition.
In our previous reports we have already presented the 3D
computer reconstruction of the Great Buddha of Bamiyan
(Figure 2, right, Gruen et al., 2002, 2003). In this article we
describe the 3D modeling procedures for (1) the terrain of the
whole Bamiyan area, (2) the entire rock cliff of Bamiyan and
(3) the two empty niches where the Buddha statues once stood.
For the modeling of the cliff and the niches, images and
geodetic measurements acquired during a field campaign in
August 2003 were used.
—
Figure 2: The expi sion of March 2001 that destroyed the Great
Buddha statue in 3 .miyan (left). The 3D computer model of the
figure, as reconst- icted from existing images (right, Gruen et
al., 2002, 2003).
The final goal is ine generation of virtual flights over the
UNESCO cultura! 1eritage site. This includes a comparison of
the previous situat on. with our high-resolution 3D models and
the current situation with the empty niches.
A photo-realistic 3D digital model of the entire Bamiyan area
and a detailed view of the cliff with and without the standing
Buddhas will be presented.
2. TERRAIN MODELING FROM SATELLITE
IMAGERY
For the 3D modeling and visualization of the area of interest, an
accurate DIM is required. We had the contours of Russian map
1:50 000 digitised, but when we tried to map an IKONOS
image onto the derived DTM we realised that its quality was not
sufficient. Aerial images were not available to us and the idea to
acquire them was unrealistic, due to the absence of any
surveying company operating in that arca. So space-based