Trekkers

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 7 October 2008

Adding another dimension to your city

Posted on 14:15 by Unknown

Your downtown is so much more than an address listing of the businesses in it. What if there were a way for someone to discover their new favorite bookstore, within easy walking distance of
the parking garage, with a coffee shop next door and a kids' play area a block away, all at once? What if you could plan a walking tour of all the historic buildings downtown, and in the process discover that there's an ice cream parlor and a pottery shop that you just have to visit along the way? There's a way to do all these things, and it's easier than you think.

Google Earth has a Photorealistic 3D Buildings layer that
you can use to host 3D models of the buildings in your downtown annotated with a wide variety of information that people might find useful. Because it's a full, navigable 3D environment, you can go on a virtual tour and get a much better feel for the city than you might from a traditional map. You can click on a building to pull up an information bubble that might contain anything from descriptions of the stores in the building to photographs of the merchandise to a description of the building itself, its construction date, and architect. You're in control of both the model and the information attached to it; you can update it with links to events happening in the area, sample restaurant menus, or websites associated with a retail store.

With a complete set of 3D models, you can even use Google Earth for city planning. Is that side street really as pedestrian-friendly as you want it to be? If I approach downtown from this bus stop, do I have a clear idea of where I should go to get to the central square?

Apart from the benefits for visitors wanting to search, browse, and explore your city, right now there's an added reason to put your 3D downtown on the map. Photo-textured, publicly-available 3D building models are still novel enough to create buzz, as the city of McMinnville, TN discovered. The idea of using the 3D models as a jumping-off point to a wide variety of content is even more compelling; Walt Disney's recent release of their Orlando theme parks and resorts really shows the potential for interactive models in Google Earth. With the new Google Earth Browser Plugin you can even place tours of your 3D models on your city's website where people explore them without needing a Google Earth client. Your city could be on the leading edge of the virtual tourism market!

If you're thinking this sounds good, but difficult and/or expensive, don't fret. There are lots of free tools to get you started. Google SketchUp is an easy-to-use 3D modeling program that you can use to construct the architectural models and apply photographs to them to generate photorealistic buildings. It's free to download, and there are lots of tutorials available to help you learn the program, and specifically to help you construct a model that's optimized for Google Earth. You can then upload your model to the 3D Warehouse, add descriptive information, and mark it for inclusion in the "Photorealistic" 3D Buildings layer in Google Earth. Alternately, your city GIS department may already have models of your downtown that you can start with; or you may want to use some other software package to build your models. If you'd prefer not to upload your models using Google's 3D Warehouse, you can contact the team behind the Cities in 3D program to learn about another way to add your models to Google Earth.

Happy modeling!

Posted by Allison Floyd, Software Engineer
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Tracking Santa: the backstory
    [Cross-posted with the Official Google Blog ] When I look back on four years of tracking Old St. Nick on Christmas Eve, I can't help but...
  • Diving into the Great Barrier Reef
    [Cross-posted from the Official Google Australia Blog ] Australia is home to many geographical treasures, and the Great Barrier Reef has to ...
  • Imagery for Myanmar (Burma)
    Posted by Matt Manolides, GIS Specialist; Dylan Lorimer, Strategic Partner Manager; and Chikai Ohazama, Product Manager In the aftermath of ...
  • Don't forget: Academic Developers Conference
    A  reminder  to all of you interested in cutting edge applications for Google Earth and Google  Maps: Google is co-sponsoring a conference w...
  • More transit agencies get on board
    Summer is my favorite season. It's warm and sunny, there's plenty of fresh fruit as a treat for my sweet tooth, all the extra daylig...
  • A fitting send-off
    Posted by Andy Connolly, Visiting Faculty, University of Washington As Stefan Geens noted on Ogle Earth , the sky can provide real fireworks...
  • New Rumsey Historical Maps and new ways to view them
    Posted by David Rumsey, Founder, David Rumsey Map Collection With the recent addition of over 100 new historical maps, there are now 120 map...
  • Organizing more than one world's information
    Posted by Michael Weiss-Malik, Software Engineer We like to think big. Vastly hugely mind-bogglingly big (to paraphrase one of my favorite ...
  • A new place to find help
    Our Google Map Help Group now has a new home! You may have already heard of (or tried out) the  new Google Help Forums . Today, our  Google ...
  • Helpful maps for the Inauguration
    There is most definitely a buzz in the air.  Hundreds of thousands of people are streaming into Washington D.C. to see Barack Obama sworn in...

Categories

  • gadgets
  • Map Maker
  • Mobile
  • Outreach
  • Quiz
  • real estate
  • Street View
  • Tip of the week
  • Transit

Blog Archive

  • ►  2009 (11)
    • ►  January (11)
  • ▼  2008 (257)
    • ►  December (17)
    • ►  November (16)
    • ▼  October (27)
      • Introducing Google.org Geo Challenge Grants
      • How the US has voted since 1980
      • La Dolce Vista - Street View comes to Italy
      • Getting around Montréal, past and present
      • Un paseo por España
      • Google Earth now available for iPhone
      • A note on election information
      • Tip of the week: Frightfully fun My Maps
      • Bioneers, Day Three
      • Greater access to voting information
      • Bioneers, Day Two
      • Google Earth Outreach connects with Bioneers
      • Dreaming New Mexico
      • Maps of the Los Angeles wildfires
      • Where in the world is... (Answers)
      • Promenez-vous sur les Champs Elysees...
      • Campaigning across Canada
      • Where in the world is ...
      • Transliteration for Japan
      • Don't forget: Academic Developers Conference
      • Tip of the week: Viewing KMLs in Google Maps
      • Maps for Android
      • Getting around your neighborhood with Google Maps
      • Adding another dimension to your city
      • Let's map Africa
      • Opening the door to geospatial data
      • Now's the time: register to vote
    • ►  September (33)
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (20)
    • ►  June (17)
    • ►  May (25)
    • ►  April (30)
    • ►  March (16)
    • ►  February (25)
    • ►  January (15)
  • ►  2007 (137)
    • ►  December (19)
    • ►  November (27)
    • ►  October (26)
    • ►  September (13)
    • ►  August (14)
    • ►  July (13)
    • ►  June (11)
    • ►  May (14)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile