Abstract

Abstract. 3D Laser scanning technology gained more and more importance for the recording and documentation of architectural heritage. Especially for the survey of heterogeneous surfaces and complex structures it is a fast and reliable option for survey and so appreciated sources for research in architecture. Therefore the integration of laser scanning as a part of the building survey became a kind of standard procedure for objects of different scale, shape, age and origin. In some cases more than one team records an object with different devices using altering approaches. For example a client provides existing data from a part of the object that can't be accessed anymore, but is important to be integrated into the overall survey. The merging of the datasets may become challenging, especially if one survey is not documented in detail, in particular when it comes to the quality of the result. For a research about the traditional architecture of Saudi Arabia a building in the historic part of Jeddah has been surveyed in detail by a team of researchers of the Vienna University of Technology. Within this frame a workshop for students of the King Abdul Aziz about building archaeological research has been conducted. As part of the results consists of two sets of laserscan data, recorded with different laser scanners. Using these data a possible approach for the registration of scan data from different and/or unknown provenance has been developed which will be outlined in this paper.

Highlights

  • The traditional architecture of Saudi Arabia is one of the unknown parts of the world’s architectural heritage and not documented yet

  • We show some achieved results that were obtained from the approach mentioned above

  • Starting with given manually selected control points (Fig. 6 blue dots), the final transformation parameters are computed in automatically manner

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The traditional architecture of Saudi Arabia is one of the unknown parts of the world’s architectural heritage and not documented yet. Within the frame of a research initiative of the Higher Ministry for Education Saudi Arabia a cooperation between King Abdul Aziz University (KAU), Jeddah and the Vienna University of Technology (VUT) was established in 2011 and with the research project Documentation and Analysis of Traditional Architecture of Saudi Arabia (DATARSA). The aim of the cooperational works was the transfer of knowhow about details of the historic buildings in Jeddah from KAU side and methods for the building archaeological research from the other side. Within this frame the research of the architecture in Al Balad, in the historical part of Jeddah has been conducted. In interdisciplinary teams (architects, geodesists, landscape architects and an anthropologist) different aspects of the traditional built environment have been investigated

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call