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Towards Interactive 3D City Models on the Web

Towards Interactive 3D City Models on the Web

Rainer Jochem, Marcus Goetz
Copyright: © 2012 |Volume: 1 |Issue: 3 |Pages: 11
ISSN: 2156-1710|EISSN: 2156-1702|EISBN13: 9781466615076|DOI: 10.4018/ij3dim.2012070103
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MLA

Jochem, Rainer, and Marcus Goetz. "Towards Interactive 3D City Models on the Web." IJ3DIM vol.1, no.3 2012: pp.26-36. http://doi.org/10.4018/ij3dim.2012070103

APA

Jochem, R. & Goetz, M. (2012). Towards Interactive 3D City Models on the Web. International Journal of 3-D Information Modeling (IJ3DIM), 1(3), 26-36. http://doi.org/10.4018/ij3dim.2012070103

Chicago

Jochem, Rainer, and Marcus Goetz. "Towards Interactive 3D City Models on the Web," International Journal of 3-D Information Modeling (IJ3DIM) 1, no.3: 26-36. http://doi.org/10.4018/ij3dim.2012070103

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Abstract

A ubiquitous accessibility of data over the Web nowadays is very common. Although the Web, 3D graphics, and geographic data are crossing their ways, common applications are typically based on technologies that are rather esoteric to most web-developers. Nevertheless, in the last couple of months, some efforts towards a seamless integration of 3D graphics into common Web browsers have been performed. Regarding the data of such applications, they are mostly proprietary and commercial data, which are collected by professional cartographers or surveyors. Nevertheless, following the Web 2.0 approach, within the last five years the trend of Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) became popular, describing an ever expanding range of users who voluntarily and collaboratively collect geographic data. Trying to merge the mentioned trends and desires, within this paper the authors present a way to transform the crowdsourced OpenStreetMap data into a 3D city model. Contrary to other existing approaches towards OpenStreetMap 3D, they combine emerging and established Web technologies, allowing an easy consumption in arbitrary web browsers. The applied technologies are easy to learn and understand by the web community and allow for quick prototyping, and creating mash-ups with further spatially enabledWeb2.0 data.

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