Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli

Highlights: • This study presents a structured methodology for the hypothetical digital 3D reconstruction of unbuilt or demolishedbuildings. • The critical digital model (CDM) of the lost church of S. Margherita in Bologna designed by Agostino Barelli in 1685 was built. • The reconstructive meth...

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Main Authors: Fabrizio Ivan Apollonio, Federico Fallavollita, Riccardo Foschi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Politècnica de València 2025-01-01
Series:Virtual Archaeology Review
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Online Access:https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/var/article/view/22554
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author Fabrizio Ivan Apollonio
Federico Fallavollita
Riccardo Foschi
author_facet Fabrizio Ivan Apollonio
Federico Fallavollita
Riccardo Foschi
author_sort Fabrizio Ivan Apollonio
collection DOAJ
description Highlights: • This study presents a structured methodology for the hypothetical digital 3D reconstruction of unbuilt or demolishedbuildings. • The critical digital model (CDM) of the lost church of S. Margherita in Bologna designed by Agostino Barelli in 1685 was built. • The reconstructive methodology is exhaustive, easily reproducible and transparent, and the 3D model is built and published in a way that is interoperableand accessible. Abstract: This paper presents a structured three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction methodology of architectural heritage adopted and implemented in the context of the CoVHer (Computer-based Visualisation of architectural Heritage) Erasmus+ project. The methodology consists of a multi-step process for hypothetically reconstructing never-built or demolished architectural heritage from the past in the form of 3D digital models. This reconstruction methodology was tested over the years with professionals, scholars and laypersons, on several case studies in the context of international workshops, museum exhibitions, VR dissemination, and it was also tested with students at the architectural drawing course at the University of Bologna. This last experimentation was particularly important because fostered us to systematise its steps and make it more easily sharable and applicable while not compromising quality and robustness. The methodological steps that we are going to address and discuss in this paper are: a) data acquisition, b) critical evaluation of historical and architectural sources, c) 2D digital redrawing of graphic material, d) construction of the 3D model, e) visualisation, f) uncertainty assessment and communication, g) documentation, and h) publication with a particular focus on interoperability and accessibility. These steps are explained in detail in order to be applicable to similar case studies and foster reproducibility, comparability, accessibility, transparency, and interoperability of the digital reconstruction. These are the key principles already recommended by the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable), the Seville Principles, and the London Charter, among others. The methodology, despite being tested on various case studies and fields, has been proven to be particularly effective for never-built or demolished architectural heritage with known authors. This paper presents the case study of the reconstruction of the unbuilt Church of S. Margherita in Bologna, designed by Agostino Barelli in 1685. This exemplary case study covers all aspects of our reconstruction methodology.
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spelling doaj-art-dadb495eb77c4b80abbb94d2df3fa79b2025-01-31T12:30:34ZengUniversitat Politècnica de ValènciaVirtual Archaeology Review1989-99472025-01-011632324310.4995/var.2024.2255421744Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino BarelliFabrizio Ivan Apollonio0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5186-1378Federico Fallavollita1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2916-0262Riccardo Foschi2https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6828-8133University of BolognaUniversity of BolognaUniversity of BolognaHighlights: • This study presents a structured methodology for the hypothetical digital 3D reconstruction of unbuilt or demolishedbuildings. • The critical digital model (CDM) of the lost church of S. Margherita in Bologna designed by Agostino Barelli in 1685 was built. • The reconstructive methodology is exhaustive, easily reproducible and transparent, and the 3D model is built and published in a way that is interoperableand accessible. Abstract: This paper presents a structured three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction methodology of architectural heritage adopted and implemented in the context of the CoVHer (Computer-based Visualisation of architectural Heritage) Erasmus+ project. The methodology consists of a multi-step process for hypothetically reconstructing never-built or demolished architectural heritage from the past in the form of 3D digital models. This reconstruction methodology was tested over the years with professionals, scholars and laypersons, on several case studies in the context of international workshops, museum exhibitions, VR dissemination, and it was also tested with students at the architectural drawing course at the University of Bologna. This last experimentation was particularly important because fostered us to systematise its steps and make it more easily sharable and applicable while not compromising quality and robustness. The methodological steps that we are going to address and discuss in this paper are: a) data acquisition, b) critical evaluation of historical and architectural sources, c) 2D digital redrawing of graphic material, d) construction of the 3D model, e) visualisation, f) uncertainty assessment and communication, g) documentation, and h) publication with a particular focus on interoperability and accessibility. These steps are explained in detail in order to be applicable to similar case studies and foster reproducibility, comparability, accessibility, transparency, and interoperability of the digital reconstruction. These are the key principles already recommended by the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable), the Seville Principles, and the London Charter, among others. The methodology, despite being tested on various case studies and fields, has been proven to be particularly effective for never-built or demolished architectural heritage with known authors. This paper presents the case study of the reconstruction of the unbuilt Church of S. Margherita in Bologna, designed by Agostino Barelli in 1685. This exemplary case study covers all aspects of our reconstruction methodology.https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/var/article/view/22554hypothetical reconstructionstandard methodologydigitalcultural heritagedocumentation3d reconstruction
spellingShingle Fabrizio Ivan Apollonio
Federico Fallavollita
Riccardo Foschi
Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
Virtual Archaeology Review
hypothetical reconstruction
standard methodology
digitalcultural heritage
documentation
3d reconstruction
title Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
title_full Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
title_fullStr Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
title_full_unstemmed Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
title_short Reconstruction of S. Margherita Project of 1685 as designed by Agostino Barelli
title_sort reconstruction of s margherita project of 1685 as designed by agostino barelli
topic hypothetical reconstruction
standard methodology
digitalcultural heritage
documentation
3d reconstruction
url https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/var/article/view/22554
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