il 2004
ematic.
er (8.8.
current
arrow
nined)
cameter
f hybrid
PS and
ise. The
sition a
question
stems to
actically
e whole
inication
| reduce
t can be
the data,
different
be more
that are
data are
>ssary to
lata sets.
iring the
sensors,
y, detect
integrate
steps are
1ake sure
? system.
e. All the
rocessing
rge delay
ing with
le do not
n danger
hers. The
it nature.
) approve
y server.
| operator
far more
liction to
ns. Some
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
telecom operators claim a position accuracy of 100 meter or
less, but as the status, the location and the operation of the
‘space’ segment (the transmitters) is not guaranteed (in contrast
to GNSS), i.e. one can not trust the derived location of the user.
Moreover without a clear business model needed to justify
adjusting their ground stations and developing a kind of
positioning service (in ordinary situations), telecom operator
will not take the lead. However, in case of disaster
management, telecom operators have to be prepared to use
telecom positioning for alerting people in the affected area.
In general, we believe that developments in global positioning
systems will reach a stage to be sufficient within the majority of
situations in disaster management, especially when
communicating with citizens. Further developments will be
needed to allow receivers to be applied within buildings and
other GNSS-hostile environments. A sort of hybrid systems
have to be developed that will connect to a special kind of
transmitters, WLAN and other short distance networks to
provide the rescue teams with highly specialised services. As
the kind of service needed to help people within buildings is
more specific compared to outdoor applications the
development of these short range-positioning tools will be
driven by specialized vendors and operators.
6. CONCLUSIONS
In this paper we have concentrated on important aspects of a
system for disaster management: 3D geo-data management and
3D positioning of the mobile user.
We expect that geo-information will have a critical impact on
the first period of an emergency handling. This will be achieved
by providing targeted information rapidly (having developed
the models and frameworks as they are discussed in Sections 3
and 4) and by collecting relevant information from the filed that
will assist coordinating rescue operations (maintaining historic
models by keeping integrity and consistency, propagating
information to all the users). Handling emergency will benefit
from knowledge approaches, based on the extraction of
information from multiple and distributed databases. These
databases have to be based on federated and collaboration
architectures (as discussed in Section 4) to provide the
emergency sector with all insights that can be realistically
obtained in support of life saving and protection of material
assets. This will prevent that vital data will not be usable simply
because of technical issues.
Accurate 3D positioning (as discussed in Section 5) will
facilitate the logistics of emergency operations by providing 3D
navigation capabilities in indoor and outdoor environments,
which are unfamiliar to the rescuers. This will increase the net
availability of resources for the core emergency tasks and limit
the chaotic nature of emergency handling.
We firmly believe that a better utilisation of geo-information
will contribute to better monitoring and fighting disasters,
leading to shorter response times, focused and efficient
emergency operations.
AKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank our partners in the EU FP6 proposal ‘Knowledge
engineering-technology for improving Urban and Urgent Risk
Management (U2RM)' for their pleasant cooperation (and the
inspiration to write this paper). This publication is the result of
633
the research programme 'Sustainable Urban Areas' (SUA)
carried out by Delft University of Technology.
REFERENCES
Arens, C., LE. Stoter, and P.J.M. van Oosterom (2003).
Modelling 3D spatial objects in a GeoDBMS using a 3D
primitive. In Proceedings AGILE 2003, Lyon, France, April
2003.
ISO/TC 211/WG 2, ISO/CD 19107, Geographic information —
Spatial schema, 2003.
OGC, 1999, Open GIS Consortium, Inc., OpenGIS Simple
Features Specification For SQL, Revision 1.1, OpenGIS Project
Document 99-049, 5 May 1999.
OMG, 2002, Object Management Group, Unified Modeling
Language Specification (Action Semantics)) UML 1.4 with
action semantics, January 2002.
OMG, 2003, Object Management Group, Response to the UML
2.0 OCL RfP (Object Constraint Language), January 2003.
Oosterom, van, P., W. Quak, and T. Tijssen, 2002, Testing
current DBMS products with real spatial data, In: E.M. Fendel,
K. Jones, R. Laurini and M. Rumor (eds.), Proceedings of
UDMS '02 23rd Urban Data Management Symposium, '30
Years of UDMS, Looking Back, Looking Forward, Prague,
Czech Republic, 1-4 October 2002
Oosterom, van, P.J.M., JE. Stoter, W.C. Quak, and S.
Zlatanova 2002. The balance between geometry and topology.
In 70" International Symposium on Spatial Data Handling,
Ottawa, Canada, July 2002. pp. 209-224
Oosterom, van P., J. Stoter, and E. Jansen. Bridging the worlds
of CAD and GIS. Chapter in book, to be published 2004.
Stoter, J.E. and P.J.M. van Oosterom, 2002, Incorporating 3D
geo-objects into a 2D geo-dbms. In Proceedings FIG,
ACSM/ASPRS, Washington D.C. USA, April 2002.
Verbree, E., Christian Tiberius and G. Vosselman, 2004,
Combined GPS-Galileo positioning for Location Based
Services in urban environment, in: Proceedings of the
Symposium on Location Based Services & Telecartography, 28-
29 January, Vienna, Austria, pp. 99-107
Zlatanova S. and D. Holweg, 2004, 3D Geo-information in
emergency response: a framework, S., in: Proceedings of the
Fourt International Symposium on Mobile Mapping Technology
(MMT'2004), March 29-31, Kunming, China 6 p.
Zlatanova, S., D. Holweg, and V. Coors, Geometrical and
topological models for real-time GIS, in: International
Workshop on Next Generation Geospatial Information, 19-21
October 2003,Cambridge (Boston), Massachusetts, USA, 6p
Zlatanova, S. and E. Verbree, 2003, Technological
developments within 3D Location Based Services, in:
Proceedings of the International Symposium and exhibition on
Geoinformation 2003, 13-14 October, Shah Alam, Malaysia,
pp.153-160.
W3C, 2004, World-Wide Web Consortium, OWL Web
Ontology Language (Overview), W3C Recommendation, 10
February 2004.
c sS