3D and 4D Simulations for Landscape Reconstruction and Damage Scenarios: GIS Pilot Applications

Authors

  • Cristiano PESARESI Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy
  • Joop VAN DER SCHEE Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Davide PAVIA Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy

Keywords:

3D and 4D Simulations; Communication and Education; Damage Scenarios; Geodatabase; GIS Platform; Landscape Reconstruction; Volcanic Hazard and Risk

Abstract

The project 3D and 4D Simulations for Landscape Reconstruction and Damage Scenarios: GIS Pilot Applications has been devised with the intention to deal with the demand for research, innovation and applicative methodology on the part of the international programme, requiring concrete results to increase the capacity to know, anticipate and respond to a natural disaster. This project therefore sets out to develop an experimental methodology, a wide geodatabase, a connected performant GIS platform and multifunctional scenarios able to profitably relate the added values deriving from different geotechnologies, aimed at a series of crucial steps regarding landscape reconstruction, event simulation, damage evaluation, emergency management, multi-temporal analysis. The Vesuvius area has been chosen for the pilot application owing to such an impressive number of people and buildings subject to volcanic risk that one could speak in terms of a possible national disaster. The steps of the project move around the following core elements: creation of models that reproduce the territorial and anthropic structure of the past periods, and reconstruction of the urbanized area, with temporal distinctions; three-dimensional representation of the Vesuvius area in terms of infrastructural residential aspects; GIS simulation of the expected event; first examination of the healthcare epidemiological consequences; educational proposals. This paper represents a proactive contribution which describes the aims of the project, the steps which constitute a set of specific procedures for the methodology which we are experimenting, and some thoughts regarding the geodatabase useful to “package” illustrative elaborations. Since the involvement of the population and adequate hazard preparedness are very important aspects, some educational and communicational considerations are presented in connection with the use of geotechnologies to promote the knowledge of risk.

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Published

2017-05-13