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RECONSTRUCTION OF THE GREAT BUDDHA OF BAMIYAN, AFGHANISTAN 
A.Gruen, F.Remondino, L.Zhang 
Institute of Geodesy and Photogrammetry 
ETH Zurich, Switzerland 
e-mail: <agruen> <fabio> <zhangl>@geod.baug.ethz.ch 
Commission V 
KEYWORDS: Cultural Heritage, Orientation, Matching, 3D Reconstruction, Surface modeling, Visualization, Photo-realism 
ABSTRACT: 
In the valley of Bamiyan, Afghanistan, ca 2000 years ago, two big standing Buddha statues were carved out of the sedimentary rock 
of the region. They were 53 and 35 meters high and the Great one figured as the tallest representations of a standing Buddha. In 
March 2601 the Taleban militia demolished the colossal statues, as they were considered an insult to Islam. After the destruction, a 
consortium was established to rebuild the Great Buddha of Bamiyan at original shape, size and place. Our group did the computer 
reconstruction of the statue, which will serve as a basis for the physical reconstruction. The work is done in parallel with three 
different data sets of images and in this paper we report the first results of the 3-D reconstruction of the Great Buddha. 
1. INTRODUCTION 
In the great valley of Bamiyan, 200 km north-east of Kabul, 
Afghanistan, two big standing Buddha statues were carved out 
of the sedimentary rock of the region, at 2500 meters of 
altitude. The Emperor Kanishka ordered their construction 
around the second century AD. Some descendants of Greek 
artists who went to Afghanistan with Alexander the Great 
started the construction that lasted till the fourth century AD. 
The town of Bamiyan, situated in the middle of the Silk Route, 
was one of the major Buddhist centres from the second century 
up to the time that Islam entered the valley in the ninth century. 
The larger statue was 53 metres high while the smaller Buddha 
measured 35 m. They were cut from the sandstone cliffs and 
they were covered with mud and straw mixture to model the 
expression of the face, the hands and the folds of the robe. To 
simulate these folds of the dress, cords were draped down onto 
the body and were attached with wooden pegs. The lower parts 
of their arms were constructed on wooden armatures while the 
upper parts of the faces were made as wooden masks. The two 
giants were painted in gold and other colours and they were 
decorated with dazzling ornaments. They are considered the 
first series of colossal cult images in Buddhist art. 
The two statues were demolished on March 2001 by the 
Taleban, using mortars, dynamite, anti-aircraft weapons and 
rockets. The Buddhists, the world community, ONU and 
UNESCO failed to convince the Taleban to leave such works of 
cultural heritage. 
After the destruction, a consortium was established with the 
goal to rebuild the Great Buddha of Bamiyan at original shape, 
size and place. This initiative is lead by the global heritage 
Internet society New7Wonders, with its founder Bernard Weber 
and the Afghanistan Institute & Museum, Bubendorf 
(Switzerland), with its director Paul Bucherer. Our group has 
volunteered to perform the required computer reconstruction, 
which will serve as a basis for the physical reconstruction. 
Using our model, first a statue at 1/10 of the original size will 
be built and displayed in the Afghanistan Museum in 
Switzerland. This will be used to study materials and 
construction techniques to be applied in the final rebuilding at 
full size. 
In this paper we present the first results of the reconstruction of 
the 3-D model of the Great Buddha of Bamiyan. 
The work is done using three different types of imagery in 
parallel: 
1. a set of images acquired on the Internet (amateur images); 
2. three metric images acquired in Bamiyan in 1970 by Prof. 
Kostka, Technical University of Graz [Kostka, 1974]; 
3. a set of touristic images acquired by Harald Baumgartner 
who visited the valley of Bamiyan between 1965 and 1969. 
We are still processing the third data set, while results from the 
first two are already available. The reconstruction is performed 
with automatic and manual procedures. Only the computer 
model generated with the manual measurements on the metric 
images will be used for the physical reconstruction of the Great 
Buddha, but in this paper we report all the results of the first 
two data sets. 
    
Figure 1: The Great Buddha of Bamiyan before the 
destruction (left); the explosion of March 2001 (center) 
and the rests after the destruction (right). 
2. METHODOLOGY OF PROCESSING 
The reconstruction process consists of phototriangulation 
(calibration, orientation and bundle adjustment), image 
coordinate measurement (automatic matching or manual 
procedure), point cloud and surface generation, texture mapping 
and visualization. 
Out of the 15 images found on the Internet, four of these were 
selected for the processing (Figure 2 - A, B, C, D): two in front 
of the big Buddha, one from the left side and one from the right 
side of the statue. All others were not suitable for 
photogrammetric processing because of very low image quality, 
occlusions or small image scale. 
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