Hochschule für Architektur, Bau und Geomatik FHNW
Dauerhafte URI für den Bereichhttps://irf.fhnw.ch/handle/11654/6
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Publikation 10 Thesen zur Bildung im digitalen Wandel des Bauwesen(11/2018) Huber, Manfred10 Thesen zur Bildung im digitalen Wandel des Bauwesen06 - PräsentationPublikation 30% oder 80% Eigenverbrauch?(AZ Medien AG, 06/2019) Hall, Monika; Bittel, RaphaelInfolge der steigenden dezentralen Stromerzeugung wird der Eigenverbrauch immer wichtiger. Die Eigenverbrauchsrate sollte daher bestimmt werden. Je nach zeitlicher Auflösung der Gebäudebilanzierung kommt man jedoch zu unterschiedlichen Ergebnissen. Welche Zeitschritte sind für die Praxis sinnvoll? Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass zur Bestimmung der Eigenverbrauchsrate und dem Autarkiegrad eine zeitliche Auflösung der Daten von einer Stunde ausreichend ist. Der Fehler ist mit dieser Auflösung gegen über 1 min Werten nicht sehr gross. Wird eine Batterie eingesetzt, spielt die Auflösung von 1, 15 oder 60 min keine Rolle mehr.01B - Beitrag in Magazin oder ZeitungPublikation 3D GIS Concepts and Technologies supporting the Integrated Management of Large and Complex Cultural Heritage Sites(2005) Nebiker, Stephan; Wüst, Thomas04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation 3D survey and digital models as the first documentation of hypogeum of S. Saba in Rome(Springer, 08.10.2018) Wahbeh, WissamOn the Aventine Minor, the oratory of Santa Silvia was home to a community of oriental monks, who, in the first half of the seventeenth century, created a typical Palestinian cemetery with a small monastery that expanded with the growing prestige of the community. The construction of the Basilica of San Saba, above the oratory, was by a group of monks, “the Benedettini di Montecassino,” who lived there in the middle of the tenth century. The substructure was only recovered in the early 1900s. The study of this architectural structure is particularly interesting because there were no complete surveys and the available documentation, as far as we know, was limited to a graphical plan and section. For this reason and due to the archeological significance, it has been selected as a national research project (PRIN 2010–2011). The research has requested detailed documentation through laser scanning and photographic-based documentation. The goal of the present work is to produce a documentation of the oratory from CAD model to the BIM construction.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation 3D-Geometrie-Erfassung für die Gebäudeerneuerung - Photogrammetrie vs. Laserscanning(21.04.2009) Nebiker, Stephan04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation 3D-Measuring für Building Refurbisment/3D-Messtechnik für die Altbausanierung(Leica, 2008) Gottwald, Reinhard; Knabl, Thomas01B - Beitrag in Magazin oder ZeitungPublikation 3DCityTV - Cloud-basierte Stereovision Mobile Mapping Services(Wichmann, 2013) Nebiker, Stephan; Eugster, Hannes04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation 04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A change of theme. The role of generalization in thematic mapping(MDPI, 2020) Raposo, Paulo; Touya, Guillaume; Bereuter, PiaCartographic generalization research has focused almost exclusively in recent years on topographic mapping, and has thereby gained an incorrect reputation for having to do only with reference or positional data. The generalization research community needs to broaden its scope to include thematic cartography and geovisualization. Generalization is not new to these areas of cartography, and has in fact always been involved in thematic geographic visualization, despite rarely being acknowledged. We illustrate this involvement with several examples of famous, public-audience thematic maps, noting the generalization procedures involved in drawing each, both across their basemap and thematic layers. We also consider, for each map example we note, which generalization operators were crucial to the formation of the map’s thematic message. The many incremental gains made by the cartographic generalization research community while treating reference data can be brought to bear on thematic cartography in the same way they were used implicitly on the well-known thematic maps we highlight here as examples.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation A Change of theme. The role of generalization in thematic mapping(MDPI, 04.06.2020) Raposo, Paulo; Touya, Guillaume; Bereuter, PiaCartographic generalization research has focused almost exclusively in recent years on topographic mapping, and has thereby gained an incorrect reputation for having to do only with reference or positional data. The generalization research community needs to broaden its scope to include thematic cartography and geovisualization. Generalization is not new to these areas of cartography, and has in fact always been involved in thematic geographic visualization, despite rarely being acknowledged. We illustrate this involvement with several examples of famous, public-audience thematic maps, noting the generalization procedures involved in drawing each, both across their basemap and thematic layers. We also consider, for each map example we note, which generalization operators were crucial to the formation of the map’s thematic message. The many incremental gains made by the cartographic generalization research community while treating reference data can be brought to bear on thematic cartography in the same way they were used implicitly on the well-known thematic maps we highlight here as examples.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation A commissioning-oriented fault detection framework for building heating systems using SARIMAX models(29.10.2024) Sawant, Parantapa; Eismann, RalphA scalable and rapidly deployable fault detection framework for building heating systems is presented. Unlike existing data-intensive machine learning approaches, a SARIMAX-based concept was implemented to address challenges with limited data availability after commissioning of the plant. The effectiveness of this framework is demonstrated on real-world data from multiple solar thermal systems, indicating potential for extensive field tests and applications for broader systems, including heat pumps and district heating.04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A Field report on the role of Free and Open Source Geospatial Software at Univeristy of Applied Sciences(Wichmann, 2012) Stark, Hans-Jörg04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A Light-weight Multispectral Sensor for Micro UAV - Opportunities for Very High Resolution Airborne Remote Sensing(2008) Nebiker, Stephan; Annen, Adrian; Scherrer, Marco; Oesch, David04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A meta-framework of methodological approaches exemplified by 3D geovisualization research(2009) Bleisch, Susanne; Dykes, Jason; Nebiker, Stephan04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A mixed methods research approach for 3D geovisualization evaluation(13.04.2010) Bleisch, Susanne; Dykes, Jason; Nebiker, Stephan04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A Model-Driven Geospatial Content Management Framework with Support for 3D City Models(2005) Nebiker, Stephan; Schütz, Stephan; Wüst, Thomas04B - Beitrag KonferenzschriftPublikation A new approach for the description of discharge extremes in small catchments(26.04.2017) Pavia Santolamazza, Daniela; Lebrenz, Henning; Bárdossy, András06 - PräsentationPublikation A Virtual reality experiment to study citizen perception of future street scenarios(SSRN, 31.03.2023) Sánchez-Vaquerizo, Javier Argota; Hausladen, Carina Ines; Mahajan, Sachit; Matter, Marc; Siebermann, Michael; van Eggermond, Michael; Helbing, DirkThe current allocation of street space is based on expected vehicular peak-hour flows. Flexible and adaptive use of this space can respond to changing needs. To evaluate the acceptance of flexible street layouts, several urban environments were designed and implemented in virtual reality. Participants explored these designs in immersive virtual reality in a 2x3 mixed factorial experiment, in which we analysed self-reported, behavioural and physiological responses from participants. Distinct communication strategies were varied between subjects. Participants' responses reveal a preference for familiar solutions. Unconventional street layouts are less preferred, perceived as unsafe and cause a measurably greater stress response. Furthermore, information provision focusing on comparisons led participants to focus primarily on the drawbacks, instead of the advantages, of novel scenarios. When being able to freely express thoughts and opinions, participants were focused more on the impact of the space on behaviour rather than the objective physical features themselves. Especially, this last finding suggests that it is vital to develop new street scenarios in an inclusive and democratic way: the success of innovating urban spaces depends on how well the vast diversity of citizens' needs is considered and met.05 - Forschungs- oder Arbeitsbericht