AHCI RESEARCH GROUP
Publications
Papers published in international journals,
proceedings of conferences, workshops and books.
OUR RESEARCH
Scientific Publications
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2021
Scianna, Andrea; Gaglio, Giuseppe Fulvio; Guardia, Marcello La
HBIM Data Management in Historical and Archaeological Buildings Journal Article
In: Archeologia e Calcolatori, vol. 31, pp. 231–252, 2021.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Archaeological Site, Cultural heritage, HBIM
@article{sciannaHBIMDataManagement2021a,
title = {HBIM Data Management in Historical and Archaeological Buildings},
author = { Andrea Scianna and Giuseppe Fulvio Gaglio and Marcello La Guardia},
doi = {10.19282/ac.31.1.2020.11},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
journal = {Archeologia e Calcolatori},
volume = {31},
pages = {231--252},
publisher = {Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche},
abstract = {Recent technological evolutions in the acquisition and management of building data are offering new opportunities for digital reconstruction. At the same time, the BIM (Building Information Modeling) methodology, based on the implementation of libraries composed of parametric objects provided by the IFC (Industry Foundation Classes) standard, allows the design and management of data of existing buildings, and, in particular, historical and archaeological buildings. In the latter case, the great variety of Cultural Heritage (CH) distributed over the European territory, and the ability of BIM to cover the life of buildings or/and other artefacts from a geometric, descriptive, physical and static point of view, have stimulated the development of the HBIM (Historic BIM) modelling. The HBIM approach should consider the complexity of historical or archaeological buildings or artefacts, with particular attention to possible fragmentation or incompleteness of parts. In this work, different approaches regarding the survey, restitution and data management will be described, finalised to the construction of an HBIM model, considering different possible variables, emerging from different study cases. textcopyright 2020 Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche. All rights reserved.},
keywords = {Archaeological Site, Cultural heritage, HBIM},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Recent technological evolutions in the acquisition and management of building data are offering new opportunities for digital reconstruction. At the same time, the BIM (Building Information Modeling) methodology, based on the implementation of libraries composed of parametric objects provided by the IFC (Industry Foundation Classes) standard, allows the design and management of data of existing buildings, and, in particular, historical and archaeological buildings. In the latter case, the great variety of Cultural Heritage (CH) distributed over the European territory, and the ability of BIM to cover the life of buildings or/and other artefacts from a geometric, descriptive, physical and static point of view, have stimulated the development of the HBIM (Historic BIM) modelling. The HBIM approach should consider the complexity of historical or archaeological buildings or artefacts, with particular attention to possible fragmentation or incompleteness of parts. In this work, different approaches regarding the survey, restitution and data management will be described, finalised to the construction of an HBIM model, considering different possible variables, emerging from different study cases. textcopyright 2020 Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche. All rights reserved.
2018
Scianna, Andrea; Gaglio, Giuseppe Fulvio; Guardia, Marcello La
BIM Modelling of Ancient Buildings Journal Article
In: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), vol. 11196 LNCS, pp. 344–355, 2018.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: 3D Modelling, Archaeological Site, Cultural heritage, HBIM, Information Systems
@article{sciannaBIMModellingAncient2018a,
title = {BIM Modelling of Ancient Buildings},
author = { Andrea Scianna and Giuseppe Fulvio Gaglio and Marcello La Guardia},
editor = { Brumana R. Wallace M. Doulamis A. Patias P. Ioannides M. Martins J. Fink E.},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-01762-0_29},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-01-01},
journal = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)},
volume = {11196 LNCS},
pages = {344--355},
publisher = {Springer Verlag},
abstract = {In the last years, new procedures on design and management of constructions, based on 3D standardised models of building elements, have been proposed. It's the case of Building Information Modelling (BIM) applications, that, differently from CAD ones, allow to work with libraries of 3D parametrical objects (smart objects) describing geometric, structural and material properties of building elements. This methodology is based on the Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) model, that represents a global standard for the building data exchange. Initially used for the design of new architectures, BIM methodology has been even more considered also for the management and the conservation of historical buildings, thanks to the possibilities of implementation of semantic information of 3D objects, guaranteed by the connection with the external database. At the same time, the lack of regular surfaces and standardised objects are relevant problems that nowadays strongly limit the use of BIM for Cultural Heritage (CH). Anyway, in recent times, the study of parameterised objects has opened new perspectives for BIM applications on historical buildings (HBIM). The present work shows the last achievements on this topic, focusing the problems derived from the application of BIM methodology to CH. In fact, the irregular shape of ancient architectural components, the wide variety of architectural languages that characterise historical buildings, the presence, sometimes, of different stratifications, are clear examples of the difficulties of implementing HBIM methodology for CH. textcopyright 2018, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.},
keywords = {3D Modelling, Archaeological Site, Cultural heritage, HBIM, Information Systems},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
In the last years, new procedures on design and management of constructions, based on 3D standardised models of building elements, have been proposed. It's the case of Building Information Modelling (BIM) applications, that, differently from CAD ones, allow to work with libraries of 3D parametrical objects (smart objects) describing geometric, structural and material properties of building elements. This methodology is based on the Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) model, that represents a global standard for the building data exchange. Initially used for the design of new architectures, BIM methodology has been even more considered also for the management and the conservation of historical buildings, thanks to the possibilities of implementation of semantic information of 3D objects, guaranteed by the connection with the external database. At the same time, the lack of regular surfaces and standardised objects are relevant problems that nowadays strongly limit the use of BIM for Cultural Heritage (CH). Anyway, in recent times, the study of parameterised objects has opened new perspectives for BIM applications on historical buildings (HBIM). The present work shows the last achievements on this topic, focusing the problems derived from the application of BIM methodology to CH. In fact, the irregular shape of ancient architectural components, the wide variety of architectural languages that characterise historical buildings, the presence, sometimes, of different stratifications, are clear examples of the difficulties of implementing HBIM methodology for CH. textcopyright 2018, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.