Abstract

Accessibility to cultural heritage is one of the most important factors in cultural heritage preservation, as it assures knowledge, monitoring, Public Administration management and a wide interest on cultural heritage sites. Nowdays 3D surveys give the geometric basis for an effective artefact reconstruction but most of the times 3D data are not completely and deeply investigated to extract other useful information on historical monuments for their conservation and safeguard. The Cultural Heritage Superintendence of Aosta decided to run a time continual project of monitoring of the Praetorian Roman Gate with the collaboration of the ITABC, CNR of Italy. The Praetorian Roman Gate in Aosta, Italy, of Augustus ages, is one of the most well-known roman monumental gates, it is a double gate with three arches each side, 12 meters high, 20 meters wide, made of pudding stone ashlars, Badoglio, travertine, marble blocks and other stone insertion due to restorations between 1600 and 1950. In years 2000 a final restoration intervention brought the gate at the present state of art, within the frame of a restoration and conservation building site with the purpose of treat the different decay pathologies and conditions. A complete 3D geometric survey campaign has been the first step for the monitoring of the gate morphologic changes and decay progress in time. The main purpose is to collect both quantitative data, related to the geometry of the gate, and the qualitative data, related to the chromatic change on the surface due to the stone decay. The geometric data with colour information permits to associate materials and stone pathologies to chemical or mechanical actions and to understand and analyse superficial decay kinetics. The colours survey will also permit to directly locate on the 3D model areas of different stratigraphic units. The project aims to build a rigorous quantitative-qualitative database so to be uploaded into a GIS. The GIS will become the monitoring main means. Considering the huge dimension of the gate and its urban location a multi-scale approach has been considered. Controlled and free images have been taken from the ground and the top of the gate so to reconstruct all the walls and the upper cover. A topographic survey has been done so to be able to control and relate all the different acquisitions. It has been chosen a Photo Scanner 3D system. It is a photogrammetry-based survey technology for point clouds acquisition and 3D models configuration, from digital images processing. This technology allows to obtain point clouds (xyz coordinates) with RGB information and geometries at different levels of complexity by processing a number of images taken with a limited set of constraints, with the use of a simple acquisition equipment and through an image matching algorithm (ZScan, by Menci Software). Due to the high walls of the arch gates, the higher part has been surveyed with a remote controlled drone (UAV Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) with a digital camera on it, so to take pictures up to the maximum altitude and with different shooting angles ( 90 and 45 degree). This is a new technology which permits to survey inaccessible parts of a high monument with ease and accuracy, by collecting redundant pictures later bound together by an image block algorithm. This paper aims to present the survey experience architectural monuments trough the application of a trifocal quick photogrammetric system, in surveying at different scales and for different purposes.

Highlights

  • 1.1 The case history monument “...One of the best monuments of the Roman military architecture is undoubtedly the Porta Pretoria d'Aosta, called Porta S

  • The Praetorian Roman Gate in Aosta, Italy, of Augustus ages, is one of the most well-known roman monumental gates, it is a double gate with three arches each side, 12 meters high, 20 meters wide, made of pudding stone ashlars, Badoglio, travertine, marble blocks and other stone insertion due to restorations between 1600 and 1950

  • Heritage of the Region of Valle d'Aosta within the frame of other joint projects [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9], the Institute for Technologies Applied to Cultural Heritage (ITABC) of CNR in Rome has developed a rigorous 3D geometric documentation of the Praetorian Gate which is the basis on which map all information on the conservation status of the monument

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Summary

THE PROJECT

1.1 The case history monument “...One of the best monuments of the Roman military architecture is undoubtedly the Porta Pretoria d'Aosta, called Porta S. The Praetoria Door, or even Praetorian Gate or Praetorians Doors, is the gateway to the east of the Roman town of Augusta Praetoria Salassorum (today Aosta). It dates to the founding of the city and is the largest among those that have reached us from the Roman world, and “may be compared to the Gate of Mars or Porta Nigra in Treviri, Rhenish Prussia... Until the eighteenth century a series of building obstructed the central and southern arches, and the only access to the city consisted of the northern passage: this explains why the road axis has moved, more oriented to the north. During the execution of the various phases new elements have emerged that have helped to understand the construction phases of the monument itself

Methodological approach of the Project
The geometrical survey: general criteria
The geometric survey: techniques and methodologies
Stages of survey and data processing
The integration and data management ARKIS
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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