Abstract

In the construction of super-tall buildings, it is rather important to control the verticality. In general, a laser plummet is used to transmit coordinates of reference points from the ground layer-by-layer, which can effectively control the verticality of super-tall buildings. However, the errors in transmission will accumulate with increasing height and motion of the buildings in construction. This paper presents a global navigation satellite system (GNSS)-based method to check the results of laser plumbing. The method consists of four steps: (1) Computing the coordinate time series of monitoring points by adjusting the GNSS monitoring network observations at each epoch; (2) Analyzing the horizontal motion of super-tall buildings and its effect on vertical reference transmission; (3) Calculating the deflections of the vertical at the monitoring point using an Earth gravity field model and a geoid model. With deflections of the vertical, the static GNSS-measured coordinates are aligned to the same datum as used by the laser plummet; and (4) Finally, validating/checking the result of laser plumbing by comparing it with static GNSS results corrected by deflections of the vertical. A case study of a 438-m high building is tested in Guangzhou, China. The result demonstrates that the gross errors of baseline vectors can be eliminated effectively by GNSS network adjustment of the first step. The two-dimensional displacements can be measured at millimeter-level accuracy; the difference between the coordinates of the static GNSS measurement and laser plumbing is less than ±2.0 cm after correction with the deflections of the vertical, which meets the design requirement of ±3.0 cm according to the Technical Specification for Concrete Structures of Tall Buildings in China.

Highlights

  • A Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) is a positioning technology widely used for monitoring displacement of large civil engineering structures, such as dams [1,2,3,4] and bridges [5,6,7,8,9]

  • The displacement of the monitoring point is characterized by systematic signal even though it may be small over a short time period, but the measurement noise is characterized by strong noise that can be reduced by wavelet filtering

  • This paper aims to monitor the verticality and analyze the horizontal motion of the W Tower in Guangzhou, China via GNSS technology, from which the following conclusions were drawn:

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Summary

Introduction

A Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) is a positioning technology widely used for monitoring displacement of large civil engineering structures, such as dams [1,2,3,4] and bridges [5,6,7,8,9]. In this case, it is difficult to accurately of the super-tall buildings. In this case, it is difficult to accurately transmit monitoring the motion of super-tall buildings in a horizontal plane and checking the result of a laser the coordinates of reference points by laser plummet, and the plumbing accuracy would be severely plumbing point on GNSSerrors technology is extremely important. We weanalyze analyze the motion of theof the Center and verticality based static

Calculation of the Monitoring Point’s Coordinate Time Series
Criteria of Eliminating
GNSS Monitoring Network Adjustment and Noise Filtering
Determination of Deflection of the Vertical Components
Difference between the Global
Simulation
Horizontal Motion Analysis
65.27 Processing
Differences
Verticality Monitoring Result of the W Tower
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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