ARTÍCULO
TITULO

A Continuous, Semi-Automated Workflow: From 3D City Models with Geometric Optimization and CFD Simulations to Visualization of Wind in an Urban Environment

Martina E. Deininger    
Maximilian von der Grün    
Raul Piepereit    
Sven Schneider    
Thunyathep Santhanavanich    
Volker Coors and Ursula Voß    

Resumen

The concept and implementation of Smart Cities is an important approach to improve decision making as well as quality of life of the growing urban population. An essential part of this is the presentation of data from different sources within a digital city model. Wind flow at building scale has a strong impact on many health and energy issues in a city. For the analysis of urban wind, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) has become an established tool, but requires specialist knowledge to prepare the geometric input during a time-consuming process. Results are available only as predefined selections of pictures or videos. In this article, a continuous, semi-automated workflow is presented, which ? speeds-up the preparation of CFD simulation models using a largely automated geometry optimization; and ? enables web-based interactive exploration of urban wind simulations to a large and diverse audience, including experts and layman. Results are evaluated based on a case study using a part of a district in Stuttgart in terms of: ? time saving of the CFD model preparation workflow (85% faster than the manual method), ? response time measurements of different data formats within the Smart City platform (3D Tiles loaded 30% faster than geoJSON using the same data representations) and ? protocols (3DPS provided much higher flexibility than static and 3D container API), as well as ? subjective user experience analysis of various visualization schemes of urban wind. Time saving for the model optimization may, however, vary depending on the data quality and the extent of the study area.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Maria Melina Dolapsaki and Andreas Georgopoulos    
This paper presents an effective and semi-automated method for detecting 3D edges in 3D point clouds with the help of high-resolution digital images. The effort aims to contribute towards addressing the unsolved problem of automated production of vector ... ver más

 
Henning Teickner, Jan R. K. Lehmann, Patrick Guth, Florian Meinking and David Ott    
In ecological research, a key interest is to explore movement patterns of individual organisms across different spatial scales as one driver of biotic interactions. While various methods exist to detect and record the presence and movements of individual... ver más
Revista: Drones

 
Antonella Ragnoli, Maria Rosaria De Blasiis and Alessandro Di Benedetto    
The road pavement conditions affect safety and comfort, traffic and travel times, vehicles operating cost, and emission levels. In order to optimize the road pavement management and guarantee satisfactory mobility conditions for all road users, the Pavem... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures

 
Petr Fucík, Antonín Zajícek, Markéta Kaplická, Renata Duffková, Jana Peterková, Jana Maxová, ?árka Takácová     Pág. 1 - 19
Rainfall-runoff events significantly influence water runoff and the loss of pollutants from tile-drained agricultural land. We monitored ten small (4 to 38 ha) tile-drained catchments in Czechia for three to five years (2012 to 2016). The discharge was m... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Yogesh Kumar Singh, Upasana Dutta, T. S. Murugesh Prabhu, I. Prabu, Jitendra Mhatre, Manoj Khare, Sandeep Srivastava and Subasisha Dutta    
Flood Response System (FRS) is a network-enabled solution developed using open-source software. The system has query based flood damage assessment modules with outputs in the form of spatial maps and statistical databases. FRS effectively facilitates the... ver más
Revista: Hydrology