Using Building Information Modelling to map the composition of glass panes in a historic house

Authors: Pocobelli, D.P., Melinis, A., Crabb, N. and Grau-Bové, J.

Journal: Digital Applications in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage

Volume: 26

ISSN: 2212-0548

DOI: 10.1016/j.daach.2022.e00232

Abstract:

Building Information Modelling (BIM) is widely regarded to be potentially useful for the conservation and management of historic buildings. So far, research in this area has mostly concentrated in geometry: surveying, the parametric modelling of building features and the accurate modelling of complex building shapes. But in order to be fully integrated with conservation practice, Building Information Models need to include other types of data. This paper demonstrates a method to introduce and visualise spatially resolved data within a Building Information Model of a historic building. It focuses on the visualisation of the composition of historic glass and the metadata associated with this measurement. The conclusions are, however, extensible to any type of spatially-resolved material information that can inform building management, conservation and interpretation. The software Dynamo is used to add this functionality to a Revit 3D model. The modelling stage requires the creation of shape families for different types of window. This approach is compared with a similar visualisation produced with ArcGIS, a common Geographic Information System (GIS) software. The Dynamo algorithm successfully adds the visualisation capacity to the BIM model, but it is unlikely that this level of customisation is achievable by the average user. There is a need for further development of technological solutions that combine the visualisation capacity of GIS with ability of BIM to link 3D models and numerical data.

Source: Scopus

Using Building Information Modelling to map the composition of glass panes in a historic house

Authors: Pocobelli, D.P., Melinis, A., Nicholas, C. and Grau-Bove, J.

Journal: Digital Applications in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage

Volume: 26

Publisher: Elsevier

ISSN: 2212-0548

DOI: 10.1016/j.daach.2022.e00232

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212054822000212

Source: Manual