International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B4. Istanbul 2004
necessary sections have to be extracted, and an additional side
strip of 300 m is added to avoid border effects.
The buildings of particular monumental and architectonical
importance require additional refining editing and
photogrammetric restitution procedures. In these cases, the
building coverage is modelled with horizontal surfaces
(geometrically identified with a contour polyline and height
point), or plane surfaces oriented in the space. Some examples
are shown in fig 12.
Figure 12: Examples of 3D representation of monumental
buildings
6.2 DDTM Generation
A file containing data on the processing (such as the 300 m
border strip, the chosen DDTM with pixel size of 20x20 cm’,
the codes of the entities involved and the interpolation type,
bilinear) was compiled for each map.
The DDTMs were also produced as georeferenced digital
images. In this way, their correcteness could be tested by
overlaying them on the digital map.
A digital grey-scale image (darker greys mean lower heights) of
a DDTM in figure 13 is shown for an entire map (almost
7300x6300 pixels, corresponding to almost 45 Mb of memory
allocation), generated by a standard PC (Pentium 4, 2 Ghz, 1 Gb
RAM). in about one hour.
Figure 13: DDTM of the entire cartographic map
6.3 True orthophoto generation
A file for each map containes data on the size and position of
the map, the name of the corresponding DDTM file,
interpolation type (nearest neighbour), and the orthophotc
resolution on the ground (i.e. for example 20 cm).
The generated orthophotos were checked by overlaying them or
a digital map, to find possible imperfections. To correct some
residual errors, and to improve chromatic equalization, a post
editing phase was made using Adobe Photoshop.
An entire orthophoto map (near 6600x5500 pixels, that means
208 Mb in True Colour mode) is shown in figure 14a that was
generated in almost 2 hours with a standard PC (pentium 4, 2
Ghz, 1 Gb RAM), with a detail (figure 14b) overlayed with
cartography (14c).
Figure 14: example of an ortophoto: an entire map (a), a portion
(b), the same portion overlayed with cartography (c).
Some other important examples of monumental buildings
extracted from the historical centre of Turin are shown in figure
15.
The image files that were obtained were saved in JPEG format,
with a relative georeferencing file (Jgw): in this way they can be
inserted with an automatic georeferentiation into any GIS
software, as displayed in fig. 16.
7. ORTHO SOLID IMAGE
The image of a digital true orthophoto and the height values
derived from DDTM can be merged in a new product: the ortho
solid image, a simple extension of the 3D solid image (Bornaz,
Dequal, 2003). In this case, for each pixel of an ortho solid
image, it is possible to record:
e 3 colour values for the true colour image (RGB)
extracted from the orthophoto and memorized in 3
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