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ise in the
planning and design of a new office complex. In the
United Kingdom there are several aerial photographic
libraries and archives held by various organisations. EPU
make full use of these services for two main reasons,
firstly it is considerably cheaper than commissioning new
photography and secondly the material 1s readily available
and this reduces project take up time. Suitable vertical
aerial photography at a scale of 1:5000 was located for this
particular site.
In conventional mapping photogrammetrists normally
digitise detail that is traditionally shown on maps and
plans by its outline or silhouette. For this project it was
necessary to adapt the approach so that the detail digitised
not only represented ground features accurately but gave
a good visual impression of how these features actually
appear (Fig. 1). Roof detail was digitised indicating their
pitch, major details on the roofs themselves, tree canopies
indicating height and spread, fences and walls showing
width and height. The ground surface was represented by
0.25 metre contours (Fig. 2) which were derived from
pertinent ground detail (kerb lines, boundaries etc.), a grid
of spot heights and supplementary height points on
important natural changes of slope processed using a
digital terrain model package.
Fig. 2 3-d detail with DTM derived contours
The coordinate system for the model was the project
coordinate system and would be used to generate all
setting-out data for the construction of the new complex.
Therefore permanent coordinated groundmarks were
distributed around the site and their positions included in
the CAD model. A field completion exercise was
undertaken in order to include obscured and missing
features. This included building groundlines if there were
large overhangs or if they had sloping walls, tree boles and
the identification and coding of hundreds of utility
inspection covers. This exercise involved the use of
electronic tacheometers and also simple "tape and offset’
measurements for some features. This additional detail
had to be added to the original dataset using Microstation
on an Interpro 125 workstation. This editing was not as
straightforward as was initially thought. The
3-dimensional nature of this project meant that it was no
longer acceptable to simply extend lines to intersect in
plan but variations in elevation also had to be considered.
Also included in the field completion exercise was the
checking by ground survey of the position of certain
critical structures on the site. It then proved necessary to
move the photogrammetrically derived models of these
buildings, by less than 50mm, to produce a consistent
model.
Inner-city redevelopment areas
Architects have for some time been aware of the
advantages of 3-dimensional computer graphics, for the
planning of new projects through to the production of near
photographic quality visualisations. Until recently
photogrammetry has been used for the production of
conventional site plans and more detailed facade details.
These are normally supplied in a 2- dimensional form on
paper or film and, more recently, in digital form on a
floppy disk, However whatever format is delivered the
amount of additional information that can be obtained
from this "flat" product is limited. Architects have had to
create 3-dimensional models from this 2-dimensional data
source. This has involved them approximating building
heights by counting brick courses and estimating window
sizes and has led to unsatisfactory and inaccurate results.
Fig. 3 Oblique photograph taken with UMK 10/13181
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Fig. 4 3-d Line string representation of facade detail
EPU were asked to produce a 3-dimensional model of a
redevelopment area of London. The specification required
a simplified block model of all structures with selected
facade information, road edges and some detailed facades