Another award for Hammersmith
My current project, the Hammersmith Flyover in West London was awarded the CIHT (Chartered Institution for Highways and Transportation Innovation Award on Tuesday. The award was in recognition of the enterprise, ingenuity, design, performance and quality of the project.Award presented by Robert Llewellyn |
The re-strengthening of the flyover, working around the existing structure and keeping traffic disruption to a minimum has been a challenge. Bespoke machinery and techniques have been used to install kilometers of new internal cabling into the bridge to replace the original tendons that have become corroded through use of winter salt and poor maintenance.
Installation of the external "blisters" |
French sub-contractor "Freyssinet" was commended for its technological expertise.
UAV Aerial Modelling
As an exercise to determine the method, procedure and results of 3D modelling by use of an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), I flew my trusty DJI F550 hexacopter around an old stone building near Thetford, a rabbit Warreners Lodge dating back to about 1400.
Approximately 80 photographs were taken from all angles around the lodge and stitched together using Agisoft Photoscan.
DJI F550 with GoPro 4 |
Approximately 80 photographs were taken from all angles around the lodge and stitched together using Agisoft Photoscan.
Some of the aerial photographs |
Once created the program could then export the results in 3DS format (3DS max), Wavefront OBJ (3D data modelling transfer format) or even generate a point-cloud which can be imported into AutoCAD via Autodesks ReCap software.
Point cloud in AutoCAD 2014 |
The finished model is not orientated or scaled. This must be done from ground dimensions taken independantly.
The quality of the final product reflects the quality of the screen captured stills taken from the original GoPro video. My next project will use high resolution photographs taken at 3 to 4 second intervals...
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