Digital Construction Preservation Techniques of Endangered Heritage Architecture: A Detailed Reconstruction Process of the Dong Ethnicity Drum Tower (China)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Hosting communal ceremonies and facilitating discussions on crucial village matters.
- Resolving disputes and mediating conflicts among villagers.
- Sounding alarm drums to warn of fires, floods, and potential threats.
- Acting as a venue for the performance of traditional Dong ethnic songs and as a social gathering place for young men and women to mingle and sing.
- Providing warmth through fire heating during festivities (see Figure 2).
- Hosting external guests and serving as a platform for announcing critical decisions and announcements.
- Introduction to drum towers and construction techniques: Through on-site inquiries and in-depth interviews, our study endeavors to reveal the cultural significance of drum towers while closely studying their construction and design process.
- Reconstruction of internal construction engineering structures: We use building information modeling (BIM) tools to record and preserve the construction techniques of the drum towers and reconstruct the complex internal construction engineering structure through case simulations [20].
- 3D reconstruction of drum tower exteriors: We use point cloud data modeling combined with a 2D image model [21] to achieve 3D reconstructions of the drum towers’ external forms. To test the feasibility of this approach, we conducted a practical demonstration using four drum towers as illustrative examples.
2. Related Works
3. Brief Introduction of Drum Tower Construction Techniques
- Site selection and material procurement: The drum tower’s location is selected in consultation with geomancers to address feng shui considerations. Construction uses primarily local materials, including pine wood, locally crafted ceramics, and tiles.
- Column structure erection: The drum tower’s structural columns are erected in several phases, beginning with the central column (also known as the primary load-bearing column) (as illustrated in Figure 3), followed by the secondary and peripheral columns.
- Bracket and rafter erection: This stage involves the assembly of brackets known as “1 gua”, “2 gua”, “3 gua”, and so on. Columns and brackets bear the structural load with rafters and beams connecting these elements. Columns and brackets have openings, while rafters and beams are mortised, creating a mortise-and-tenon structure. This feature is fundamental to drum towers and other Dong architectural structures [32].
- Eave pillar erection: During this phase, peripheral pillars are constructed around the central column.
- Rafter connections: The rafters are of two kinds: surrounding rafters and through rafters. The former plays the role of pulling and fixing the overall frame, while the latter connects the internal and external frames, effectively interconnecting the column brackets.
- Pagoda construction: This phase involves the construction of the uppermost part of the pagoda, including the pinnacle and the drum tower platform.
4. Reconstruction of the Internal Construction Engineering Structure of the Zengchong Drum Tower Utilizing On-Site Data and BIM Tools
4.1. Data Collection for Structural and Architectural Components
4.1.1. Structural Components and Architectural Decorations
4.1.2. Manual Measurements
4.1.3. Point Cloud Data
4.2. Modeling
5. 3D Reconstruction of Drum Tower Exterior Profiles Using Point Cloud Data
5.1. Data Acquisition and Pre-Processing
5.2. Drum Tower 3D Reconstruction
6. Discussions and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Chaoli | Congjiang | Zeli | Zengchong | |
---|---|---|---|---|
# captured images | 33 | 96 | 99 | 86 |
# extracted frames | 191 | 94 | 115 | 159 |
Overlaps | 75% | 70% | 80% | 80% |
GSDs | 4.35 cm | 3.27 cm | 2.96 cm | 3.54 cm |
Flight heights | 80 m/70 m/60 m/50 m | 70 m/60 m/40 m | 50/40 m/30 m | 75 m/50 m/40 m/30 m |
Median Distances | Mean Distances | RMS Distances | |
---|---|---|---|
Congjiang | 2.64 cm | 3.68 cm | 5.31 cm |
Zenchong | 3.78 cm | 4.14 cm | 4.64 cm |
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Huang, W.; Gao, X.; Lu, J. Digital Construction Preservation Techniques of Endangered Heritage Architecture: A Detailed Reconstruction Process of the Dong Ethnicity Drum Tower (China). Drones 2024, 8, 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones8090502
Huang W, Gao X, Lu J. Digital Construction Preservation Techniques of Endangered Heritage Architecture: A Detailed Reconstruction Process of the Dong Ethnicity Drum Tower (China). Drones. 2024; 8(9):502. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones8090502
Chicago/Turabian StyleHuang, Wantao, Xiang Gao, and Jiaguo Lu. 2024. "Digital Construction Preservation Techniques of Endangered Heritage Architecture: A Detailed Reconstruction Process of the Dong Ethnicity Drum Tower (China)" Drones 8, no. 9: 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones8090502
APA StyleHuang, W., Gao, X., & Lu, J. (2024). Digital Construction Preservation Techniques of Endangered Heritage Architecture: A Detailed Reconstruction Process of the Dong Ethnicity Drum Tower (China). Drones, 8(9), 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones8090502