)04
the
del
lan
We
ent.
this
1 of
rger
s of
nate
the
are
ived
ured
are
| the
cm.
1 the
Js Is
ually
ding.
v the
This
m the
inning
1500
—
ments
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing
| Planning | Derived er — Total =
: No. | 5 Model x | _ Model | Station |
ER NS 100073 } “10,030 3
I 750) a — 2
L4 [10350 | 10 „404 | — 10, 1400 |
Table 3. Comparison of lengths of three segments (unit: mm)
6. CONCLUSIONS
We proposed a conceptual framework and the core processes
for building reconstruction from images and points acquired by
close range sensors. The core processes were then partially
implemented and applied to real data sets to evaluate the
proposed framework and processes. The evaluation results
support the promising performance of the proposed processes in
terms of the precision and accuracy of the derived building
models.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This research was supported by The University of Seoul. We
would like to thank Seokjae Sa, Euijong Oh, Changho Yu,
Donghyun Kim and other members of the geodesy and
photogrammetry group for acquiring and processing the data.
REFERENCES
Ackermann, F. 1999. Airborne laser scanning — present status
and future expectations. /SPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and
Remote Sensing, 54(2-3), pp. 64-67.
Baltsavias, E. 1999, A comparison between photogrammetry
and laser scanning. /SPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and
Remote Sensing, 54(2-3), pp. 83-94.
Edelsbrunner, H., Kirkpatrick, D. G. and Seidel, R., 1983. On
the shape of a set of points in the plane. /EEE Transactions on
Information Theory, 29(4), pp. 551-559.
Habib, A., Shin, S., and More gan, M., 2002. New Approach for
calibrating off-the-shelf digital cameras. In: The International
Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial
Information Sciences, Graz, Austria, Vol. XXXIV, Part 3A, pp.
144-149.
989
and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
Halla, N. and Brenner, C., 1999. Extraction of buildings and
trees in urban environments. /SPRS Journal of Photogrammetry
and Remote Sensing, 54(2-3), pp. 130-137.
Jung, F., 2004. Detecting building changes from multitemporal
aerial stereopairs. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and
Remote Sensing, 58(3-4), pp. 187-201.
Lee, L, 2002. Perceptual Organization of Surfaces. Ph.D.
Dissertation, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Ei ngineering and
Geodetic Science, The Ohio State Univ ersity, Columbus, OH.
Lee, L, and Schenk, T., 2001a. Autonomous extraction. of
planar surfaces from airborne laser scanning data. In: ASPRS
Annual Conference, St. Louis-MO.
Lee, L, and Schenk, T., 2001b. 3D perceptual organization of
laser altimetry data. In: The International Archives of the
Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information
Sciences, Annapolis-MD, Vol. XXXIV, Part.3/W4. pp. 57-65.
Lee, L, and Schenk, 2002. Perceptual organization of 3D
surface points. In: The International Archives of the
Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information
Sciences, Vol. XXXIV, Part 3A, pp. 193-198.
Maas, H. -G. and Vosselman, G., 1999. Two algorithms for
extracting building models from raw laser altimetry data. /SPRS
Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, 54(2-3), pp.
153-163.
Schek, T., 1999. Photogı rammetry and laser altimetry, In: The
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing
and Spatial Information Sciences, La Jolla, CA, Vol. XXXII,
Part.3-W14, pp. 3-12.
Stoter J. and Zlatanova, S., 2003. 3D GIS, where are we
standing, In: Joint Workshop on Spatial, Temporal and Multi-
Dimensional Data Modelling and Analysis, Quebec city,
Canada, 6p.
Zlatanova, S., Rahman A. A. and Pilouk, M., 2002. 3D GIS:
current status and perspectives, In: the Joint Conference on
Geo-spatial theory, Processing and Applications, Ottawa,
Canada, 6p.