International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 32, Part 3W14, La Jolla, CA, 9-11 Nov. 1999
THE USE OF LASER SCANNER DATA FOR THE EXTRACTION OF BUILDING ROOF DETAIL USING STANDARD
ELEVATION DERIVED PARAMETERS
T.D. Chilton, J. Jaafar and G. Priestnall
School of Geography
University of Nottingham
tchilton@wardrobe.u-net.com
jaafar@ geography.nottingham.ac.uk
Gary.Priestnall@nottingham.ac.uk
KEY WORDS: Laser Scanning, LIDAR, Roof Detail, 3D City Models.
ABSTRACT
3D city modelling is a rapidly growing research area in the field of feature extraction. As the demand for 3D data increases, so does the
necessity for higher detail building models. The use of aerial imagery and photogrammetric processing has been dominant in the field of
feature extraction for several decades. Recently this dominance has been challenged by laser scanning techniques which offer direct 3D
data capture at high resolutions. This paper investigates the use of laser scanning data for roof detail extraction. This has already been
considered by Maas and Vosselman (1999) who used data with a sample spacing of more than five points per m?. The data set in this
paper was created using an Optech Airborne Laser Terrain Mapper 1020 LIDAR sensor with 2.5m point spacing which was interpolated
onto a 2m regular grid. The aim of this paper is to explore the extent to which useful roof detail can be extracted using this relatively low
resolution LIDAR data. A 2D building outline database was used to define the roof boundaries.
The ability of the LIDAR data to extract roof detail was tested using algorithms based on LIDAR elevation and derived slope and aspect
parameters. An industrial area and a residential area were selected as test sites. Results show that the LIDAR aspect parameter was the
most successful at reconstructing building roofs. Using LIDAR aspect data, the results show a percentage correspondence of derived
roof ridges to actual ridges of around 33% for the residential area (86% for the industrial area). The amount of roof detail extracted is
greater for the industrial study area due to the simpler, larger roof structures. The report concludes that relatively low resolution laser
scanning data can be used to extract roof detail, but that results are only significant for large, simple roof buildings.
1 INTRODUCTION
In recent years there has been an increasing interest in the
availability of 3D descriptions of real world scenes, especially
within urban areas. These 3D city models are being sought
after for use in a wide range of applications including urban
planning and virtual reality applications (Newton, 1996). As
the technology behind 3D modelling matures, there is an
increasing requirement for greater building detail. This paper
looks at a possible data source for one aspect of building
description, that of roof detail.
The field of feature extraction has been dominated for several
decades by the use of aerial photography and photogrammetric
processing. Building recognition is one research area within
this field which focuses mainly on the extraction of building
outlines using edge detection techniques (Frere et al., 1997).
Attempts have been made using aerial imagery to extract 3D
roof detail supplementary to the ground plan information.
Griien and Dan (1997) attempted to match extracted roof and
building line segments derived from aerial imagery to an a
priori building classification. A semi-automated approach was
tested by Lang and Forstner (1996) by creating building
models based on building examples from the actual study area.
It is likely that this procedure would be more time consuming
than the method adopted by Griien and Dan (1997), but may
end up being more accurate due to the site specific nature of
the building models.
Photogrammetry for 3D modelling has limitations. Braun et al.
(1995) state that aerial imagery contains too much information
in addition to the building information that would enable easy
extraction of building outlines and roof information. 3D
information is imposed onto a 2D image format making 3D
reconstruction harder. Lengthy stereo-matching procedures are
required to extract height information using user defined
sampling methodologies. Low contrast edges and poor image
perspectives make building extraction more complex still.
Laser scanning is a relatively new technology that is
challenging the dominance of photogrammetry in the field of
feature extraction, especially for 3D city modelling. Laser
scanning offers direct 3D data capture at high resolutions and
the possibility to extract roof detail. Hug (1997), Maas and
Vosselmann (1999) and Weidner (1997) have looked at the
extraction of buildings using laser scanner data. Maas and
Vosselmann (1999) have looked in particular at the extraction
of roof detail. They use raw laser scanner point data which for
their study has a density of over five points per square metre.
Triangulation of the point data and other processing stages
were required to produce high detail roof structures. Authors
"such as Jaafar et al. (1999) and Haala and Brenner (1999),
however, have used the more common form of laser scanner