Semantically describing urban historical buildings across different levels of granularity

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

E. Colucci (Politecnico di Torino)

Margarita Kokla (National Technical University of Athens)

M. A. Mostafavi (Laval University)

F. Noardo (TU Delft - Urban Data Science)

A. Spanò (Politecnico di Torino)

Research Group
Urban Data Science
Copyright
© 2020 E. Colucci, M. Kokla, M. A. Mostafavi, F. Noardo, A. Spanò
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIII-B4-2020-33-2020
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 E. Colucci, M. Kokla, M. A. Mostafavi, F. Noardo, A. Spanò
Research Group
Urban Data Science
Issue number
B4
Volume number
43
Pages (from-to)
33-40
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Abstract

Architectural, built heritage and historical buildings embody cultural heritage value and-as known-they need to be studied, documented, persevered and represented. Although there are many fields involved in these activities, none of these considered individually can fully represent the heritage with a complete level of detail and information. The present work aims to investigate the different levels of detail and granularity among different communities involved in historical buildings tasks to semantically define different concepts. In this context, ontologies are considered as an effective solution for the formal conceptualization of the domains involved, providing a common language for knowledge sharing and reuse. The study starts from existing knowledge (standards, vocabularies, thesauri, classifications) and conceptualisations for regional, urban and architectural heritage and geographic information for various tasks (restoration, documentation and heritage studies, risk prevention, heritage asset and facility management, education and tourism, urban planning and energy refurbishment/performance). A specific use case involving historical buildings in fortified centres across different levels of detail is described to show how existing knowledge and standards conceptualisation need to be integrated and extended.