Abstract

BackgroundTechnological developments and globalized working processes have transformed the building process. However, current digital semantic building models no longer adequately represent the increasing complexity of modern building projects. The potential of combining agent-based and graph-based methods, for example for energy calculations or spatial research strategies, is not fully exploited.MethodsIn our system, users search for building floorplans, for example as sources of inspiration, by creating conceptual hand-drawn sketches of building parts on multi-touch devices. The sketch is analyzed and used to query a federated database system comprising a building information model server, the graph database neo4j and the content management system mediaTUM. Users interact with client applications that show and continuously update a list of floorplans by sending queries to a central coordinator service. In the paper, we describe the coordinator that enables our databases to appear as a single smart information system to search for digital information about buildings and visualize their floorplans. The application case comprises search by drawing the initial design idea of a building to find similar floorplans e.g. as source of inspiration.ResultsOur federated database system is queried using semantic building floorplan fingerprints, which are formalized as graphs and encoded in a common schema, like our AGraphML, to represent spatial configurations and perform graph matching. As graph matching is computationally expensive, the coordinator needs to analyze the queries, separate different fingerprints and metadata and pass it to specialized agents, implemented as microservices, for processing. The returned result sets are combined and the results are visualized. The use of multiple agents facilitates the recombination of the data from the underlying disparate data sources and also serves to support different execution strategies which are chosen using properties of the query and a set of predefined rules.ConclusionsTo deal with complex and dynamic queries, as well as dynamic results that are updated while some agents are still executing, a caching framework was developed which takes the similarity measures of the graph-based building representation into account when determining query equality.

Highlights

  • Technological developments and globalized working processes have transformed the building process

  • The notion of a building floorplan fingerprint was introduced which describes the main characteristics of a building’s design. This forms the basis for assessing the similarity of different reference solutions to a specified problem and serves, as an index for the building model repository

  • This paper describes an information retrieval system that allows users to search for building models that are similar to a hand-drawn sketch of a building or parts of a building on a multi-touch device to support the design process of architects

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Summary

Introduction

Technological developments and globalized working processes have transformed the building process. Roith et al Visualization in Engineering (2017) 5:20 such as floor plans To address these shortcomings, Langenhan et al (2013) introduced a novel approach which facilitates the automatic lookup of reference solutions from a repository using graphical search keys. The notion of a building floorplan fingerprint was introduced which describes the main characteristics of a building’s design. This forms the basis for assessing the similarity of different reference solutions to a specified problem and serves, as an index for the building model repository. Architects typically work with traditional design tools in the early design stages, such as model-making, sketches and the use of reference examples. Digital equivalents have already been devised for several traditional design tools, many of these do not fully translate the original strengths of the analogue methods into the digital world and fail to make full use of digital possibilities

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