The paper deals with the research issues concerning Historic Building Information Modelling, developing the outcomes of the national project BHIMM, carried out in 2017. The topic has a strategic value, as the relevant new tools enable the kind of Knowledge Management required by the Planned Conservation vision. The key point is the step from implementing BIM authoring software to build a single parametric model, to the definition of several domain-specific parametric models fit for each of the many activities involved in built heritage conservation process. As designed for specific aims, the models can differ both in accuracy and in identification of the objects. This vision moves the research agenda towards exchange platforms and semantic interoperability, pointing out the development of specific ontologies as a crucial task to be carried out in the next years.
CITATION STYLE
Della Torre, S., & Pili, A. (2020). Built heritage information modelling/management. Research perspectives. In Research for Development (pp. 231–241). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-33570-0_21
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.