GoogleEarth 6 plants 3D trees

Google published version 6 of GoogleEarth and the most important update for our profession is that it comes with 3D trees!

However, not the whole Earth is populated with trees yet but only some areas in a few selected cities: According to TechCrunch 80 million trees were “planted” in Athens, Berlin, Chicago, New York City, San Francisco and Tokyo. Yet, the quality of trees is rather low but Google claims to distinguish 50 species already. Other updates of version 6 include an enhanced integration of StreetView and a more user-friendly overview and navigation through historic aerial images. The new version is a beta and does not update automatically but must be installed from the Google download site. A GoogleEarth showcase can be downloaded here.

The key question for us is how the integration may facilitate the use of GoogleEarth as a tool in landscape related design and planning professions. Sheppard and Cizek (2009) discussed the various technical and ethical issues of previous GoogleEarth versions and identified the lack of vegetation as one of the major limitations. Our tests in the Kimberley Climate Adaptation Project supported the argument that the lack of vegetation distorts the representation of future design scenarios in GoogleEarth and inhibits the otherwise potentially useful tool for landscape planning.

In this context, the new GoogleEarth version allows new user tests and applications. Next steps could be to explore how 3D trees are inserted and distributed, assessments how realistic GoogleEarth forest stands are,  and how user´s landscape perception will change with regard to Google´s “Tree View”. As one of the first new applications, Google.org is planning to use the virtual trees to push (real) reforestation campaigns.

Autodesk // Labs_ Project Galileo

Project Galileo will be previewed at Autodesk University, Dec 1st, 2010. Galileo is an easy-to-use planning tool for creating 3D city models from civil, geospatial and building data, and 3D models. Galileo also enables users to sketch conceptual infrastructure ideas within the 3D city model. Using Galileo, planners, GIS analysts, project managers, and architects can help stakeholders better understand infrastructure projects and plans in the context of the built and natural environment.

Check: http://atlandsend.typepad.com/at-lands-end/

Is it based on the LandXplorer framework?

OpenStreetMap makes Bing!

OpenStreetMap (OSM) project founder Steve Coast has announced that he has joined Microsoft to work on its Bing Maps team. According to Coast, Microsoft will be providing access to its “global orthorectified aerial imagery to help OpenStreetMappers make the map even better than it already is”.

Call for Papers – AGIT Exhibition and Conference 2011

Salzburg July 6-8, 2011

AGIT is a well established conference where every year many members of the German-speaking geoinformation community come together. Now the call for papers for 2011 will open from December 1, 2010 to February 1, 2011.

Themes in 2011 will be:

  • Nature and landscape, climate and hydrology
  • HealthGIS
  • Sustainable energies, water management and spatial planning
  • Mobility
  • geoGovernment
  • GeoMES: Catastrophe management
  • Geoinformation in infrastructure management

Methods and Technologies

  • 3-D models and cartographic communication
  • Geomatics, remote sensing and image processing
  • Mobile and location based services
  • Dynamic modeling and simulation
  • INSPIRE: Geoinfrastructure
  • VGI and OpenSource geoinformation software
  • Real time forum: Best practice

For more information and registration please see www.agit.at

Autodesk// Labs_ Project VASARI – Conceptual design and analysis for buildings

Download and check out this technology preview:
“Autodesk® Project Vasari is an easy-to-use, expressive design tool for creating building concepts. Vasari goes further, with integrated analysis for energy and carbon, providing design insight where the most important design decisions are made. And, when it’s time to move the design to production, simply bring your Vasari design data into the Autodesk® Revit® platform for BIM, ensuring clear execution of design intent.

Project Vasari is focused on conceptual building design using both geometric and parametric modeling. It supports performance-based design via integrated energy modeling and analysis features. This new technology preview is now available as a free download and trial on Autodesk Labs.”

Sounds like a sort of SketchUp with Add-ons for BIM and analysis. VASARI is based on the Revit framework but with a different GUI.

New publication: From Information to Participation. Interactive Landscape Visualization as a Tool for Collaborative Planning

Cover
Cover

If landscape visualizations are applied as tools for participation, they should provide a high level of interactivity to facilitate planning process and outcomes. This book presents evidence for this hypothesis through demonstrative case studies in the Entlebuch UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Switzerland. In collaborative workshops, interactive real-time visualizations were used to respond directly to the dialogue, and long-term climate change impacts were illustrated through collapsing time animations.

This thesis is now available as a book and can be order at http://www.vdf.ethz.ch/vdf.asp?showArtDetail=3222

Stereo multi-touch tabletop interface

Immersion has developed as part of the EU’s V-City project, a collaborative tabletop interface to interact with 3d city environments. The prototype was shown at Siggraph 2010. The multi-view support allows two users to view different viewpoints of the model at the same time from the same 3d mockup.

ESRI ArcGIS + Procedural CityEngine + Nvidia RealityServer

Procedural has joined ESRI’s Business Partner Program. Automatic creation and cloud-based visualization of photorealistic 3D cities from ArcGIS data with CityEngine and RealityServer. Presented on a Tegra Tablet at ESRI User Conference 2010 in San Diego.

IMAGINA 2011 CALL FOR PROJECTS

Conferences: Urbanism & Landscape
Wednesday 2 and Thursday 3 February 2011

Submit a presentation about your experience in 3D for the following themes:

your 3D experience to plan, manage and promote your city or your territory.
your adoption of « Geo-referenced » 3D model in the context of your project studies.
your experience of 3D applied to the preservation of landscape and natural areas.

Preview ESRI ArcGIS 10: 3D GIS at ArcGIS 10

This video shows some lang to display, analyze, and maintain 3D data in ArcGIS 10. Visit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ake22nfomg&feature=related