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Title
Year
Virtual Systems – Actual Objects: Rendition of Morphosis ' Compositional Principles in the mid 1980s
2018
Formal Analysis and Computer Process - Medley I/II
2018
Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand’s Clockwork
2018
Le squelette de la Maison du Peuple : hypothèse de restitution 3D
2017
Espaces de processus/Espaces d'analyse. Description graphique de mécanismes géométriques compositionnels et représentationnels. Los Angeles dans les années 1980 : morceaux choisis
2017
Jean Prouvé - 3D short movies
2016
Caractérisation de formes architecturales. Une approche expérimentale intégrant complexité et intelligibilité des représentations numériques
2016
Study and Rendition of Jean-Baptiste Hourlier's projection drawings
2016
Architectural Analysis & Computer Process IV
2016
Morphosis Drawings and Models in the Mid 1980s: Graphic Description of Graphic Thinking
2016
Architectural Analysis & Computer Process III
2015
Architecture « résolument » numérique : Paradigm Shift vs. paradigme albertien ?
2015
Immeuble Bessonneau à Casablanca - Hypothèse de restitution de l’état originel
2015
Reduce to Understand: a Challenge for Analysis and Three-dimensional Documentation of Architecture
2015
Analyse architecturale, modélisation 3D et narration filmique : un regard original sur quelques objets corbuséens
2015
Jean-Nicolas-Louis Durand - Representation as Instrument
2015
Architectural Analysis & Computer Process II
2014
Education in Architectural Analysis through Hybrid Graphic Means: a Setup for Critical Thinking
2014
Architectural Analysis & Computer Process I
2013
Aménagement du Hall des Beaux-Arts par Lucien-Jacques Baucher
2013
Baucher-Blondel-Filiponne - 3D short movies
2012
La complexité inhérente aux modèles numériques et le paradigme de la représentation architecturale - Brèves considérations sur les pratiques contemporaines
2012
Jacques Dupuis & Albert Bontridder - 3D short movies
2011
Photomodélisation de la Maison de Verre de Paul-Amaury Michel
2010
[x] Van Buuren House Orthophotographic Survey
2009
Al Taybeh 3D Photogrammetric Survey
2008
Architectural analysis and relevance of digital representation techniques - An educational experiment
2007
Peter Eisenman's Houses I to X
2002
EXPLORER: A Procedural Modeler Based on Architectural Knowledge
1997
POV-Ray: architectural analysis and computer rendering
1995

Van Buuren House Orthophotographic Survey

Collaborating institution & subvention: Direction des monuments et sites de la région bruxelloise (actually Urban.brussels)
Budget: 20.000 €

This work constitutes an orthophotographic survey of the dining room, loggia, music salon, cozy corner, hall, office, and workshop of the Van Buuren couple’s house at 41 Avenue Léo Errera in 1180 Brussels. Orthophotography uses photographic support as a tool for surveying and observing architectural elements. With the advancement of digital sensors, a digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera can extract a wealth of information about a building, including its materials, geometry, and measurements. In the case of a facade survey, a photograph taken with a 12-million-pixel sensor has the potential to reveal twelve million colorimetric details of the subject and an equal number of two-dimensional spatial coordinates. However, image processing is necessary to remove distortion effects inherent to the internal geometry of cameras. The results obtained from this process are referred to as orthophotography. Image correction involves both three-dimensional and two-dimensional processing. Before a photograph can be properly processed, it is essential to position and align it within the virtual space of the studied scene. This operation, known as camera calibration, determines the metric and spatial values contained in our representation.

Although orthophotographs generally exhibit both visual and metric coherence (with a precision level ranging from 0.5 to 2 centimeters) when compared to elevations and plans, some cannot be regarded with the same dimensional quality. The complex spatial configuration of the Van Buuren Museum and the narrowness of the spaces necessitate the use of a wide-angle lens, which, despite post-processing, compromises the metric accuracy of certain orthophotos. This situation is particularly evident in floor surveys. “Shadow zones” (areas with missing or reconstructed data) result from the presence of “parasitic” elements—such as immovable furniture, paintings, and sculptures—in the orthogonal projective system of the photos. Whenever possible, some of these zones have been reconstructed to maintain graphical consistency throughout the document.

The orthophotographic sections result from a combination of orthophotographic views extracted from specific spaces within the Van Buuren Museum, along with the projection of the building’s overall geometry in cross-section. Each orthophotographic projection plane corresponds to a cross-sectional plane located just in front of the elevation of the object it represents. The complete section is thus an aggregation of local projection planes situated at different depths within the structure.

For clarity within the space, we opted for a volumetric section system along the North-South axis. This allowed us to precisely cut through the center of the ridge axis while representing a maximum number of depth planes. Additionally, this approach highlights the communication between the hall and the music salon. As a result, we obtained a relatively complex global section system that emphasizes how the space is perceived, both geometrically and in relation to other areas. The geometric drawing is derived from a basic survey of the building, suitable for a drawing scale of 2 cm/m.