Digitalization and Spatial Documentation of Post-Earthquake Temporary Housing in Central Italy: An Integrated Geomatic Approach Involving UAV and a GIS-Based System

Author:

Tonti Ilaria1ORCID,Lingua Andrea Maria2ORCID,Piccinini Fabio34ORCID,Pierdicca Roberto4ORCID,Malinverni Eva Savina4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Architecture and Design (DAD), Politecnico di Torino, 10125 Torino, Italy

2. Department of Environmental, Land and Infrastructure Engineering (DIATI), Politecnico di Torino, 10129 Torino, Italy

3. Flyengineering s.r.l., 62029 Tolentino, Italy

4. Department of Civil and Building Engineering and Architecture (DICEA), Università Politecnica delle Marche, 60131 Ancona, Italy

Abstract

Geoinformation and aerial data collection are essential during post-earthquake emergency response. This research focuses on the long-lasting spatial impacts of temporary solutions, which have persisted in regions of Central Italy affected by catastrophic seismic events over the past 25 years, significantly and permanently altering their landscapes. The paper analyses the role of geomatic and photogrammetric tools in documenting the emergency process and projects in post-disaster phases. An Atlas of Temporary Architectures is proposed, which defines a common semantic and geometric codification for mapping temporary housing from territorial to urban and building scales. The paper presents an implementation of attribute specification in existing official cartographic data, including geometric entities in a 3D GIS data model platform for documenting and digitalising these provisional contexts. To achieve this platform, UAV point clouds are integrated with non-metric data to ensure a complete description in a multiscalar approach. Accurate topographic modifications can be captured by extracting very high-resolution orthophotos and elevation models (DSM and DTM). The results have been validated in Visso (Macerata), a small historical mountain village in Central Italy which was heavily damaged by the seismic events of 2016/2017. The integrated approach overcomes the existing gaps and emphasizes the importance of managing heterogeneous geospatial emergency data for classification purposes. It also highlights the need to enhance an interoperable knowledge base method for post-disaster temporary responses. By combining geomatic tools with architectural studies, these visualization techniques can support national and local organizations responsible for post-earthquake management through a 3D modelling method to aid future transformations or interventions following other natural disasters.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,Aerospace Engineering,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering

Reference72 articles.

1. World Bank, and United Nations (2010). Natural Hazards, UnNatural Disasters: The Economics of Effective Prevention, World Bank.

2. Perrucci, D., and Baroud, H. (2020). A Review of Temporary Housing Management Modeling: Trends in Design Strategies, Optimization Models, and Decision-Making Methods. Sustainability, 12.

3. (2023, March 18). EM-DAT EM-DAT|The International Disasters Database. Available online: https://www.emdat.be/.

4. Wahba, S., Triveno, L., Terraza, H.C., and Antos, S.E. (2023, March 18). Building Better before the next Disaster: How Retrofitting Homes Can Save Lives and Strengthen Economies. Available online: https://blogs.worldbank.org/sustainablecities/building-better-next-disaster-how-retrofitting-homes-can-save-lives-and-strengthen-economies.

5. Alexander, D. (2002). Principles of Emergency Planning and Management, Oxford University Press. [1st ed.].

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