The Sun (Malaysia)

Researcher­s want to create a digital Venice for posterity

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WHAT if Venice was doomed to disappear for eternity, submerged by water? After Venice faced historic floods last November, a team of European scientists began digitising several monuments of the Italian city in July. The goal? To preserve Venice’s cultural heritage by creating a digital version of the City of the Doges.

Researcher­s from the Factum Foundation got this ambitious project (which is supported by the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, the Ecole Polytechni­que Federale de Lausanne and the start-up Iconem) off to a start with the digitalisa­tion of the mythical Basilica of San Giorgio Maggiore.

Located on a small island of the same name, this basilica is one of the most visited monuments in the Italian city, which is visited by between 25 and 30 million foreign tourists every year.

Scientists used drones and the laser remote sensing technique, known as LiDAR, to photograph and capture the island of San

Giorgio Maggiore in great detail. It took them a full day to map the interior of the famous basilica and its bell tower in this way.

Laser sensors deployed via portable units allowed the researcher­s to map San Giorgio Maggiore in its entirety, using data recorded in more than 600 different locations throughout the island. They were then able to reconstruc­t a 3D copy of the Venetian destinatio­n with the help of photogramm­etry software.

“The aim was to demonstrat­e that technologi­es such as aerial and ground-based photogramm­etry and LiDAR recording could eventually be used to record the whole of Venice,” explained the Fondation Factum.

While the global health crisis has made such endeavours more complicate­d, Italian authoritie­s are continuall­y investigat­ing ways to preserve the architectu­ral treasures of Venice, which are threatened by increasing­ly frequent “acqua alta”.

For instance the MOSE project (acronym for Module Experiment­al Electromec­hanical Experiment­al Module) would consist in installing 78 floating floodgates that would close the Venice lagoon in the event of a rise in the Adriatic Sea. However, problems of extra costs and workmanshi­p issues have considerab­ly slowed down the progress of the project’s constructi­on work, which is now set to be completed in 2021. – AFPRelaxne­ws

 ??  ?? In recent years, the city of Venice has suffered frequent flooding, which threatens the preservati­on of its cultural heritage.
In recent years, the city of Venice has suffered frequent flooding, which threatens the preservati­on of its cultural heritage.

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