Abstract
Designed as a pragmatic approach that anticipates change to cultural heritage, this chapter discusses responses that encompass records for tangible cultural heritage (monuments, sites and landscapes) and the narratives that see the impact upon them. The Curious Travellers project provides a mechanism for digitally documenting heritage sites that have been destroyed or are under immediate threat from unsympathetic development, neglect, natural disasters, conflict and cultural vandalism. The project created and tested data-mining and crowd-sourced workflows that enable the accurate digital documentation and 3D visualisation of buildings, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage at risk. When combined with donated content, image data are used to recreate 3D models of endangered and lost monuments and heritage sites using a combination of open-source and proprietary methods. These models are queried against contextual information, helping to place and interrogate structures with relevant site and landscape data for the surrounding environment. Geospatial records such as aerial imagery and 3D mobile mapping laser scan data serve as a framework for adding new content and testing accuracy. In preserving time-event records, image metadata offers important information on visitor habits and conservation pressures, which can be used to inform measures for site management.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Visual heritage: digital approaches in heritage science |
Editors | Eugene Ch'ng, Henry Chapman, Vincent Gaffney, Andrew S. Wilson |
Place of Publication | Switzerland |
Publisher | Springer, Cham |
Pages | 51-65 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9783030770280 |
ISBN (Print) | 9783030770280, 9783030770303, 9783030770273 |
Publication status | Published - 2022 |
Keywords
- UNESCO
- Heritage conservation
- SfM photogrammetry
- Multi-view stereo