80 research outputs found

    INVESTIGATING THE PERFORMANCE OF A HANDHELD MOBILE MAPPING SYSTEM IN DIFFERENT OUTDOOR SCENARIOS

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    In recent years, portable Mobile Mapping Systems (MMSs) are emerging as valuable survey instruments for fast and efficient mapping of both internal and external environments. The aim of this work is to assess the performance of a commercial handheld MMS, Gexcel HERON Lite, in two different outdoor applications. The first is the mapping of a large building, which represents a standard use-case scenario of this technology. Through the second case study, that consists in the survey of a torrent reach, we investigate instead the applicability of the handheld MMS for natural environment monitoring, a field in which portable systems are not yet widely employed. Quantitative and qualitative assessment is presented, comparing the point clouds obtained from the HERON Lite system against reference models provided by traditional techniques (i.e., Terrestrial Laser Scanning and Photogrammetry)

    Multi-temporal analysis to support the management of torrent control structures

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    In the last decade with increasing frequency of extreme weather events, an accurate, sustainable, and effective planning of torrent control structures has become essential to reduce hydro-geomorphic risk. Quite often in planning interventions, there is a lack of information on the effectiveness of existing structures, the evolution of the ongoing hydro-geomorphic process, and a priori in-depth study to analyze the sediment morphology dynamics and the interaction with possible existing torrent control structures. Nowadays, High-Resolution Topography data (HRT) greatly simplifies the monitoring of sediment morphology dynamics and the understanding of the interaction with torrent control structures over time. Therefore, thanks to repeated HRT surveys, it is possible to derive multi-temporal Digital Terrain Models (DTMs), and DTMs of Difference (DoDs) to quantify the morphological changes and study continuously the catchment morphodynamics. This information can be very valuable to support watershed management plans if combined with up-to-date field surveys that identify the existing torrent control structures, and asses their current status and functionality. The present work aims at introducing a methodological approach based on the integration of the sediment morphology dynamics data over large time spans (e.g., from 2003 to 2022), obtained by multi-temporal DoDs (realized from three DTMs at 1 m resolution), with an updating cadastre of torrent control structures enriched by a very simple, quick, and user-friendly Maintenance Priority index (MPi). The proposed workflow proved to be very useful in the test basins analysed, providing more complete data on torrent control structures and sediment dynamics evidence to stakeholders compared to the past. Moreover, it served as a proxy to assess the long-term effectiveness of the management interventions. The approach also helped to constantly identify the areas most prone to hazards, improve the intervention planning, and find more appropriate solutions or direct the maintenance works. Finally, the suggested workflow could be the starting point to outline up-to-date guidelines to be used in other catchments equipped with torrent control structures, emphasizing possible intervention priorities on where decision-makers could better invest resources. By providing current information and accurate tools to realize a more complete decision-making chain, which is often neglected, it is certainly possible to support more sustainable and effective risk management decisions

    Analyzing the Data-Rich-But-Information-Poor Syndrome in Dutch Water Management in Historical Perspective

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    Water quality monitoring has developed over the past century from an unplanned, isolated activity into an important discipline in water management. This development also brought about a discontent between information users and information producers about the usefulness and usability of information, in literature often referred to as the data-rich-but-information-poor syndrome. This article aims to gain a better understanding of this issue by studying the developments over some five decades of Dutch national water quality monitoring, by analyzing four studies in which the role and use of information are discussed from different perspectives, and by relating this to what is considered in literature as useful information. The article concludes that a “water information gap” exists which is rooted in different mutual perceptions and expectations between the two groups on what useful information is, that can be overcome by improving the communication. Such communication should be based on willingness to understand and deal with different mindframes and should be based on a methodology that guides and structures the interactions
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