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Author
Cheok, G. S. | Lipman, R. R. | Witzgall, C. | Bernal, J. | Stone, W. C.
Title
NIST Construction Automation Program Report No. 4: Non-Intrusive Scanning Technology for Construction Status Determination.
Coporate
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD
Report
NISTIR 6457, January 2000, 98 p.
Keywords
construction | lasers | 3D models | construction automation | cut-fill calculation | Delaunay triangulation | laser radar | laser imaging | metrology | terrain modeling
Abstract
Approximately 2% of all construction work must be devoted to manually intensive quality control and tracking of work completion, including operations involving earthmoving and bulk materials handling. Any technology that can reduce this burden and decrease time to delivery will offer a significant competitive edge. One of the more difficult things to track at a construction site is the geometry of things that are not neatly classified as "components." The ability to capture such "amorphous" data becomes important if one is to achieve true automation. Amorphous data include such things as the state of excavation of terrain, the presence of raw materials (e.g., sand, gravel) depots; the location and extent of spoil piles; progress of a concrete casting; highway alignment; paving operations; etc. To obtain this information, the current state-of-practice is to conduct surveys which can be time-consuming and costly. The objectives of the project are to utilize new scanning technologies to improve critical construction status assessment needs by making these measurements faster and cheaper than traditional methods and to develop, in conjunction with industry, standard means for transmission and interpretation of such data. It focuses on the development of an integrated software and wireless remote sensing system that will accept input from a variety of high speed automated ranging sensors and create a 3D model of the present state of a portion of a construction site. This report details the initial activities in the project and documents procedures used to acquire and display data obtained from a scanner and to perform simple volume calculations. A disk with the source codes for the programs developed as past of these efforts is included with this report.