6. DTM information plane
On this IP, the designer can check the
topographic conditions in the route corridor and
determine where tunnel should be built to pass through
the mountain; where bridge should be built to across
the deep crayon.
7. 3D-perspection information plane.
On this IP, the designer can check the correction
of the bridge and tunnel sites and drainage system.
A mathematical reference system should provide the
linkage between individual layers.
The conceptual framework of GIS for railway
design is shown in fig. 2.
RAILWAY DESIGN
This GIS system provide the basic data for
railway design. In reconnaissance and feasibility
stage, The design steps is follows;
1. The designer collects all kind of data from
diffirent sources to establish the engineering
database.
2. determine the political, social, topographic
Control factors. The meaning is that the railway line
has to pass these control points.
3. The designer could interpret the engineering
feature on the three- band colour composition imges
directly from the screen, finding out the factors of
influencing the railway line location on the ground,
such as the naturàl environmental, geologcal and
hydrological condition; the main rivers and road
Systems; the catchment areas of the main rivers, the
building material sources. The designer selects all
possible railway line between the start point and the
end point in the topographic information plane on the
Screen.
4. The designer evaluate all feasible line,
calculate the amount of earthwork, the length of
tunnels and bridges. The final optimum railway line
will get from the shortest distance , lowest construction
cost and vehicle operating cost.
9. Checking the correction of the bridge and
tunnel sites, drainage structure on the 3D — perspect
information plane.
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6. The designer put the selected railway line on
the topographic information plane and output the
design documents and maps.
CONCLUSION
This paper exploits the integration of remote
sensing data with GIS data, their effective utilization
in the railway design. The following can be concluded
in this study.
1. The system has demonstrated that it is
technically feasible to solve the engineering practical
problem. Designer can directly choose the best railway
line on the screen in preventing wasteful repetition of
survey effort.
2. Determining the railway line on the
topogrophic informastion plane can keep the accuracy
of the railway design.
3. Using Landsat image data updating the GIS
data to keep the reliable engineering data base.
The whole system is so far in the testing status.
REFRENCES
Beaumont, T. E. et al. , 1988. GIST. A Geographic
information system Toolkit for water Resource and
Engineering applications, ISPRS Kyoto 1988 B4
pp497 — 506.
Guaraci Erthal, 1988. A General Data Model for
Geographic Information Systems , ISPRS Kyoto
1988 B4 pp529—537.
Mathias J.P.M. Lemmens, 1988. Automatically
GIS updating from classified satellite Images Using
GIS knowledge. ISPRS Kyoto 1988 B4 pp198 —
206.
Terrence Keating, William Phillips, and Kevin
Ingvam, 1987. An Integrated Topologic Database
Design for Geographic Information Systems,
Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Semsing,
Vol. 53 No. 10, pp1399— 1402.
T. Oshima, 1988. Automatic Road Selection from
LANDSAT Data, ISPRS Kyoto 1988 B7 pp423 —
432.
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