4 research outputs found

    Recording Fort Lytton. A digital and historical documentation

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    Between 2013 and 2016, Fort Lytton, a colonial military bastion in Brisbane (Australia), was digitally documented by 3D laser technology thanks to a collaboration between CSIRO, the University of Queensland’s School of Architecture and the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service. The results of this collaboration are a series of virtual models and digital scan data, or pointclouds, photographs and documents. Includes a booklet that aims to provide a historical context for the better interpretation of the produced material

    Recording the former penal settlement of St Helena Island. A digital and historical documentation

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    Between 2013 and 2017, the site of the former penal settlement of St Helena, in Moreton Bay (Australia) was digitally documented by 3D laser technology thanks to a collaboration between CSIRO, the University of Queensland’s School of Architecture and the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service. The results of this collaboration are a series of virtual models and digital scan data, or pointclouds, photographs, videos and documents

    Norman Creek Catchment: dwelling on floodscapes

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    The existence of water catchments within inner city locations can often be obscured by the patterns of urban development that dominate the form and experience of the city. The Norman Creek catchment situated south-east of Brisbane’s CBD is one example, typical of many, where the expansion of a city dominates the presence of earlier landscapes.The research outlined in this report takes a multi-modal approach to determining urban development potentials by mapping a number of environmental information layers in correlation with one other. Principal among these layers is water and its interaction with the environment. The character of Norman Creek catchment as an inhabited floodscape can be used as a means to understand the capacity of future urban development

    Recording Peel Island. A digital and historical documentation

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    Between 2011 and 2017, the site of the former Peel Island lazaret, in Moreton Bay (Australia) was digitally documented by 3D laser technology thanks to a collaboration between CSIRO, the University of Queensland’s School of Architecture and the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service. The results of this collaboration are a series of virtual models and digital scan data, or pointclouds. Includes a booklet that aims to provide a historical context for the better interpretation of the produced material
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