The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
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Articles | Volume XLII-2/W8
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-2-W8-17-2017
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-2-W8-17-2017
13 Nov 2017
 | 13 Nov 2017

THE XII CENTURY TOWERS, A BENCHMARK OF THE ROME COUNTRYSIDE ALMOST CANCELLED: THE SAFEGUARD PLAN BY LOW COST UAV AND TERRESTRIAL DSM PHOTOGRAMMETRY SURVEYING AND 3D WEB GIS APPLICATIONS

L. Barelli, P. Paolini, and G. Forti

Keywords: XII century towers, Rome Mid-Age countryside, Cultural Heritage preservation, close-range photogrammetry, UAV photogrammetry, integrated survey, low-cost action camera, GPS, Web GIS 2D and 3D

Abstract. “Giving a bird-fly look at the Rome countryside, throughout the Middle Age central period, it would show as if the multiple city towers has been widely spread around the territory” on a radial range of maximum thirty kilometers far from the Capitol Hill center (Carocci and Vendittelli, 2004).

This is the consequence of the phenomenon identified with the “Incasalamento” neologism, described in depth in the following paper, intended as the general process of expansion of the urban society interests outside the downtown limits, started from the half of the XII and developed through all the XIII century, slowing down and ending in the following years. From the XIX century till today the architectural finds of this reality have raised the interest of many national and international scientists, which aimed to study and catalog them all to create a complete framework that, cause of its extension, didn’t allow yet attempting any element by element detailed analysis. From the described situation has started our plan of intervention, we will apply integrated survey methods and technologies of terrestrial and UAV near stereo-photogrammetry, by the use of low cost drones, more than action cameras and reflex on extensible rods, integrated and referenced with GPS and topographic survey. In the final project we intend to produce some 3D scaled and textured surface models of any artifact (almost two hundreds were firstly observed still standing), to singularly study the dimensions and structure, to analyze the building materials and details and to formulate an hypothesis about any function, based even on the position along the territory. These models, successively georeferenced, will be imported into a 2D and 3D WebGIS and organized in layers made visible on basemaps of reference, as much as on historical maps.