Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras

Automatic reality capture and monitoring of construction sites can reduce costs, accelerate timelines and improve quality in construction projects. Recently, automatic close-range capture of the state of large construction sites has become possible through crane and drone-mounted cameras, which resu...

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Main Authors: Mustafa K. Masood, Antti Aikala, Olli Seppänen, Vishal Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Built Environment
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbuil.2020.581295/full
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spelling doaj-c699ba3dde6744939e4cc0d5d6c90dc02020-12-21T06:16:26ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Built Environment2297-33622020-12-01610.3389/fbuil.2020.581295581295Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane CamerasMustafa K. Masood0Antti Aikala1Olli Seppänen2Vishal Singh3Department of Civil Engineering, Aalto University, Espoo, FinlandDepartment of Civil Engineering, Aalto University, Espoo, FinlandDepartment of Civil Engineering, Aalto University, Espoo, FinlandCentre for Product Design and Manufacturing (CPDM), Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, IndiaAutomatic reality capture and monitoring of construction sites can reduce costs, accelerate timelines and improve quality in construction projects. Recently, automatic close-range capture of the state of large construction sites has become possible through crane and drone-mounted cameras, which results in sizeable, noisy, multi-building as-built point clouds. To infer construction progress from these point clouds, they must be aligned with the as-designed BIM model. Unlike the problem of aligning single buildings, the multi-building scenario is not well-studied. In this work, we address some unique issues that arise in the alignment of multi-building point clouds. Firstly, we show that a BIM-based 3D filter is a versatile tool that can be used at multiple stages of the alignment process. We use the building-pass filter to remove non-building noise and thus extract the buildings, delineate the boundaries of the building after the base is identified and as a post-processing step after the alignment is achieved. Secondly, in light of the sparseness of some buildings due to partial capture, we propose to use the best-captured building as a pivot to align the entire point cloud. We propose a fully automated three-step alignment process that leverages the simple geometry of the pivot building and aligns partial xy-projections, identifies the base using z-histograms and aligns the bounding boxes of partial yz-projections. Experimental results with crane camera point clouds of a large construction site show that our proposed techniques are fast and accurate, allowing us to estimate the current floor under construction from the aligned clouds and enabling potential slab state analysis. This work contributes a fully automated method of reality capture and monitoring of multi-building construction sites.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbuil.2020.581295/fullreality capturemulti-building point cloudbuilding extractionBIM modelconstruction sitecrane cameras
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mustafa K. Masood
Antti Aikala
Olli Seppänen
Vishal Singh
spellingShingle Mustafa K. Masood
Antti Aikala
Olli Seppänen
Vishal Singh
Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
Frontiers in Built Environment
reality capture
multi-building point cloud
building extraction
BIM model
construction site
crane cameras
author_facet Mustafa K. Masood
Antti Aikala
Olli Seppänen
Vishal Singh
author_sort Mustafa K. Masood
title Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
title_short Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
title_full Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
title_fullStr Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
title_full_unstemmed Multi-Building Extraction and Alignment for As-Built Point Clouds: A Case Study With Crane Cameras
title_sort multi-building extraction and alignment for as-built point clouds: a case study with crane cameras
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Built Environment
issn 2297-3362
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Automatic reality capture and monitoring of construction sites can reduce costs, accelerate timelines and improve quality in construction projects. Recently, automatic close-range capture of the state of large construction sites has become possible through crane and drone-mounted cameras, which results in sizeable, noisy, multi-building as-built point clouds. To infer construction progress from these point clouds, they must be aligned with the as-designed BIM model. Unlike the problem of aligning single buildings, the multi-building scenario is not well-studied. In this work, we address some unique issues that arise in the alignment of multi-building point clouds. Firstly, we show that a BIM-based 3D filter is a versatile tool that can be used at multiple stages of the alignment process. We use the building-pass filter to remove non-building noise and thus extract the buildings, delineate the boundaries of the building after the base is identified and as a post-processing step after the alignment is achieved. Secondly, in light of the sparseness of some buildings due to partial capture, we propose to use the best-captured building as a pivot to align the entire point cloud. We propose a fully automated three-step alignment process that leverages the simple geometry of the pivot building and aligns partial xy-projections, identifies the base using z-histograms and aligns the bounding boxes of partial yz-projections. Experimental results with crane camera point clouds of a large construction site show that our proposed techniques are fast and accurate, allowing us to estimate the current floor under construction from the aligned clouds and enabling potential slab state analysis. This work contributes a fully automated method of reality capture and monitoring of multi-building construction sites.
topic reality capture
multi-building point cloud
building extraction
BIM model
construction site
crane cameras
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbuil.2020.581295/full
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