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VRML
Applications in Construction
The Need
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Traditionally
construction process information is communicated with paper
documents and 2D CAD drawings. Recently, the industry has
embraced many kinds of web-based technologies, but information
still uses document-based
model. It is believed that transition to model-based information
can be done through web-based 3D user interface. Moreover,
there is a need to easily model
structures to be used in a web-based user interface. |

VRML World of the NIST Fire Research Facility Emissions
Control System.
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The Technology
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The applicability of
the Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) is being
investigated for visualizing the activities at a construction
site and creating an advanced web-based 3D user interface for
construction process information by the
Computer-Integrated Construction Group at NIST.
In principle, VRML is an open
standard that offers the possibility of accessing many types
of construction project information using readily available
and well-accepted graphical user interfaces based on 3D
visualization of a model rather than paper over the Web. In
order to view the VRML worlds, the users should have a VRML
browser, which can be a stand-alone application, a helper application,
and a plug-in. The most commonly used VRML browser is the
plug-in
such as Cosmo
Player, Cortona,
Blaxxun
Contact, and WorldView.
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VRML Excavator,
Tower Crane, and Dump Truck

Virtual Cybernetic Building Testbed
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Many of
the commercial CAD systems are primarily geometry modelers,
rather than object modelers. Regardless of the file format
used to export a model (including VRML), they frequently
export the 3D model as only a collection of surfaces
representing the geometry that contains far too many polygons
and unnecessary details. They also fail to preserve the
aggregation of geometry elements into objects and the
relationship between objects. There is no possibility of
accessing and viewing information in the 3D model other than
the geometry.
Intelligently constructed VRML
representations of steel structures can be done in an
object-like fashion. Object-like VRML representations make it
easier to update models or to extend the implementation of the
object without having to change the model.
Several VRML worlds have been
generated in NIST including:
- The NIST Fire Research
Facility Emissions Control System (ECS). The structure was modeled almost entirely with a
Beam PROTO. The Beam PROTO, based on the VRML Extrusion node,
allows for the creation of a wide variety of beams and other
building elements typically used for steel structures.
- A User-Controlled
Excavator, Tower Crane, and Dump Truck. This
VRML model can handle some of the issues related to construction
site activities, including: user-controlled articulation and
motion of equipment, collision detection between equipment,
driving over nonuniform terrain, deforming (digging) the
terrain, and moving objects between pieces of equipment.
- Virtual
Cybernetic Building Testbed. This simulation deals with
the interaction between a fire and HVAC system. The VRML world
is used to display the results of a coupled fire and
ventilation system simulation.
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The Benefits
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VRML can
successfully be used in construction industry applications and
give benefits including:
- Easily model
structures to be used in a web-based user interface.
- Web-based
user interface is easily accessed by all project
participants
- VRML can represent steel
structures in an object-like fashion.
- Object-like VRML
representations are easier to update or to extend.
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Status
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NIST Fire Research
Facility ECS construction project recently started tracking
materials and equipment, generate VRML model from spatio-temporal
database to track materials as they arrive onsite and are
assembled query database for geometric and non-geometric
information from VRML model, and real-time tracking of construction
equipment using DIS-Java-VRML.
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Barriers
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The success of VRML
application in construction industry depends on
object-oriented CAD technology and standard data exchange
protocols. Object-oriented CAD systems are emerging into the
construction industry design practice and, at the same time,
new data exchange protocols are emerging that enables the
extraction of complete models in the form of object instances,
such as CIMSteel Integration Standards (AISC), Industry Foundation
Classes (IFC), and Standard for Exchange of Product Data (STEP). |
Points of Contact
- Robert Lipman, NIST, 100 Bureau
Drive, Stop 8630, Gaithersburg, MD 20899-8630, E-mail: robert.lipman@nist.gov
References
- Focus on Web3D, About.com, http://web3d.about.com/compute/web3d/
- Robert Lipman and Kent Reed, Using
VRML In Construction Industry Applications,
Web3D VRML 2000 Conference, February 2000.
- VRML for Construction Site
Activities, http://cic.nist.gov/vrml/
- Web3D Consortium, http://www.web3d.org/
- Web3D / VRML Browser Detector,
NIST, http://cic.nist.gov/vrml/vbdetect.html
Disclaimer Statement
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Neither the Construction
Industry Institute nor Purdue University in any way endorses this
technology or represents
that the information presented can be relied upon without further investigation. |
MA35 |