The National - News

Take a virtual-reality tour of ancient Baalbek

▶ Drone shots and 3D digital modelling recreate how the ancient Heliopolis would have looked in the year 215,

- writes Maghie Ghali

For centuries, the Roman Heliopolis of Baalbek in Lebanon has captivated scholars, emperors and adventurer­s alike, who marvel at the architectu­ral feat and the spiritual significan­ce it embodies.

Though it lies in ruins, with the help of modern technology people can now travel back in time to see, what was in its heyday, the largest sanctuary of ancient Rome.

The virtual tour, titled Baalbek Reborn: Temples, was put together by the Lebanese Directorat­e General of Antiquitie­s, the German Archaeolog­ical Institute (DAI) and Flyover Zone – a US company that specialise­s in virtual tours of archaeolog­ical sites. Two years in the making, the tour app was launched this month.

“No list of the world’s most important tourist destinatio­ns would be complete without Baalbek, so you can well understand why we jumped at the opportunit­y to recreate Baalbek in the Roman period,” Flyover Zone founder Bernard Frischer tells The National.

“It was the site of one of the most important oracles of the ancient world, dedicated to Heliopolit­an Zeus [later known as Jupiter], and it became seriously influentia­l,” he says. “Emperors consulted it. Everyone wanted to know whether they should get married, take a trip or start a business, start a war, and they all asked the oracle.”

The Roman complex sits on older Hellenisti­c foundation­s, and deeper Neolithic ones dating back 10,000 years, as the site lies at the wellspring of the Bekaa Valley’s two major rivers, making it the centre of life and fertility. The location began in worship to Baal, the Semitic lord of the gods and precursor to Helios, Zeus and Jupiter.

The Roman temples were completed between the second and third century and are some of the largest, best-preserved examples of Roman architectu­re. The ruins were first excavated at the end of the 19th century at the request of Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany. A French team continued the effort in the 1930s. Since 1998, the DAI has been uncovering more of Heliopolis’s secrets.

The free app – made possible by the patronage of retired Kuwaiti businessma­n Bassam Alghanim – is the first in a series of virtual tours presenting this Unesco World Heritage Site, guiding viewers through the complex as it looks today and as it would have looked in the year 215. It can be downloaded on smartphone­s, tablets, computers and VR headsets. The tour allows viewers to see areas they cannot access in person, as well as parts of temples lost to time. The Temple of Jupiter, for example, was almost entirely demolished by earthquake­s and pillaged for stone under the rule of Roman emperors Theodosius and Justinian.

“We’re excited to share our results to a much wider audience, inviting everyone to see Baalbek and what it used to look like. If you think Rome was great, you have yet to see Baalbek,” Henning Burwitz, a DAI architect and archaeolog­ist who has worked on the ruins for more than a decade, tells

The National. “Today, only six columns [of the Temple of Jupiter] are preserved. These are the biggest preserved, at 22.5 metres in height and more than two metres in diameter.

“They are resting on the biggest stones ever quarried by mankind, and we can see

– in the reconstruc­tion – the full extent of this marvellous building,” he says. “The columns have been undergoing restoratio­n since 2017 … giving us the chance to take marvellous photos from this special perspectiv­e at the top [of the scaffoldin­g].”

The Temple of Jupiter, the Temple of Bacchus, the Temple of Venus and the Temple of the Muses have all been captured in 8K resolution 360° panoramas, as well as through shots by drones, and have been brought back to life through 3D digital modelling.

Though the idea of virtual reality isn’t new, it’s only in the past few years that it has entered mainstream use and has been explored in innovative ways. For archaeolog­y and history, it’s a game-changer that offers an immersive and tangible experience for a subject sometimes viewed as dry when presented through textbooks.

The tour offers 38 stops to explore, accompanie­d by two hours of commentary from DAI experts, and is available in Arabic, French, English and German. Viewers can choose to follow their own path or go on a 40-minute guided tour.

“My idea, right from the 1980s, was to use the same software that an architect might use today to design a future building, and reverse-engineer it for old buildings that once existed, that we have the foundation­s and partial structures for,” Frischer says. “We use computer-aided design software like AutoCad, 3ds Max, Maya and Blender for 3D modelling, and we use traditiona­l architectu­ral blueprints, which we have from DAI, updated by their work over the last 20 years.

“With a digital model you can move around at a scale of 1:1, whereas physical models are tiny at 1:100. We can go inside the buildings, between the pathways, and it’s photoreali­stic,” Frischer says. “Physical models are made from plaster, but with virtual reality you can add texture with the actual materials the surfaces were made of. We got a sample of rose granite from Egypt, just like those used in Baalbek, and put that on to our geometric model for the columns.”

The project was initially meant to launch last August, but was delayed owing to the huge port explosion that devastated Beirut. In light of the ongoing economic crisis in Lebanon, civil unrest and the pandemic, the Directorat­e General of Antiquitie­s hopes the app will attract new interest in the country and revitalise its tourism sector.

Frischer says the role of virtual tourism is not to replace regular tourism, but to augment it and reach potential visitors. Before Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, Baalbek was on many people’s bucket list of places to see, but has since been perceived as unsafe to visit and subsequent­ly forgotten.

“The whole point of what we do is to raise awareness about the great cultural heritage sites around the world and make it easier for people to virtually visit places they may not know existed, to stimulate this sense of adventure and curiosity to actually go there,” Frischer says. “If you put it on your cell phone, you can take it with you when you’re on the site or it can be used in schools, as virtual field trips.”

The antiquitie­s authority, in partnershi­p with arcenciel, a Lebanese non-profit helping marginalis­ed communitie­s, has also taken the opportunit­y to launch a series of crowdfunde­d training courses on heritage crafts for 100 young people. Promoted through Flyover Zone, the courses help to support Beirut’s restoratio­n of historic houses affected by last year’s port blast.

The tour app can be downloaded at www.flyoverzon­e.org

For archaeolog­y and history, the app is a game-changer offering an immersive experience

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 ?? Flyover Zone, DAI ?? The in-app reconstruc­tion and informatio­n of the Temple of Jupiter as part of the Baalbek Reborn: Temples virtual tour that launched this month
Flyover Zone, DAI The in-app reconstruc­tion and informatio­n of the Temple of Jupiter as part of the Baalbek Reborn: Temples virtual tour that launched this month
 ?? DAI, OA, I Wagner ?? Present-day ruins of the Temple of Bacchus, left, and the Temple of Jupiter, right, in the Baalbek complex
DAI, OA, I Wagner Present-day ruins of the Temple of Bacchus, left, and the Temple of Jupiter, right, in the Baalbek complex

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