Ontology-based semantic conceptualisation of historical built heritage to generate parametric structured models from point clouds

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

E. Colucci (Politecnico di Torino)

Xufeng Xing (Laval University)

M. Kokla (National Technical University of Athens)

Mir Abolfazl Mostafavi (Laval University)

Francesca Noardo (TU Delft - Urban Data Science)

Antonia Spanò (Polito FULL|the Future Urban Legacy Lab, Politecnico di Torino)

Research Group
Urban Data Science
Copyright
© 2021 Elisabetta Colucci, Xufeng Xing, Margarita Kokla, Mir Abolfazl Mostafavi, F. Noardo, Antonia Spanò
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11062813
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 Elisabetta Colucci, Xufeng Xing, Margarita Kokla, Mir Abolfazl Mostafavi, F. Noardo, Antonia Spanò
Research Group
Urban Data Science
Issue number
6
Volume number
11
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Abstract

Nowadays, cultural and historical built heritage can be more effectively preserved, val-orised and documented using advanced geospatial technologies. In such a context, there is a major issue concerning the automation of the process and the extraction of useful information from a huge amount of spatial information acquired by means of advanced survey techniques (i.e., highly detailed LiDAR point clouds). In particular, in the case of historical built heritage (HBH) there are very few effective efforts. Therefore, in this paper, the focus is on establishing the connections between semantic and geometrical information in order to generate a parametric, structured model from point clouds using ontology as an effective approach for the formal conceptualisation of application domains. Hence, in this paper, an ontological schema is proposed to structure HBH representations, starting with international standards, vocabularies, and ontologies (CityGML-Geography Markup Language, International Committee for Documentation conceptual reference model (CIDOC-CRM), Industry Foundation Classes (IFC), Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus (AAT), as well as reasoning about morphology of historical centres by analysis of real case studies) to represent the built and architecture domain. The validation of such schema is carried out by means of its use to guide the segmentation of a LiDAR point cloud from a castle, which is later used to generate parametric geometries to be used in a historical building information model (HBIM).