Statues - Palazzo Vecchio - Florence, Italy
| General Attributes |
| DOI | 10.34946/D6M59H |
| Project Name | Statues - Palazzo Vecchio - Florence |
| Country | Italy |
| Status | Published |
| Download |
| Spatial Data | Download (Links to all available data types will be emailed) |
| Data Type |
Size |
Device Name |
Device Type |
| LiDAR - Terrestrial | 0.43 GB | Faro Focus S120 | Phase Based Laser Scanner |
| Photogrammetry - Terrestrial | 7.8 GB | Nikon D7000 | DSLR |
| Background |
| Site Description | The Hall of the Five Hundred (Salone dei Cinquecento) in Palazzo Vecchio stands as one of Florence's most magnificent spaces, built in 1494 during the brief republican period following the Medici expulsion. Originally designed by Cronaca to house the Council of Five Hundred - the governing body of the Florentine Republic. | |
| Project Description |
Several statues were targeted for photogrammetric reconstruction, including:
- The Genius of Victory (in the Hall of the 500)
- Hercules and Centaur (in the Hall of the 500)
- Hercules and Diomedes (in the Hall of the 500)
- Hercules and Cacus (at western entrance, Piazza Della Signoria)
Abstract
Motivated by observations from recent earthquakes, and in an effort to understand the seismic response of culturally important statues, a methodology is proposed for an integrative approach to document culturally important statues, which combines both engineering parameters and visualization. Documentation includes surface and material, geometric and visual, and boundary condition surveys as well as three dimensional digital reconstructions. Reconstruction facilitates attainment of geometric and mass properties using data from terrestrial laser scanning and structure-from-motion three dimensional reconstruction. The proposed methodology is applied to a representative number (24) of statues in Florence, Italy using a field survey in 2011. The majority of the statues are determined to be freestanding on rough pedestals with high aspect ratios and limited motion restriction. Using the documentation and simplified characterization obtained from these studies, it is envisioned that the seismic vulnerability and response of statues may be estimated, knowing the statues’ locations and anticipated earthquake demands at the site (building or free-field).
From the article
Wittich, C.E., Hutchinson, T.C., Wood, R.L., Seracini, M., and Kuester. F. (2016). Characterization of full-scale human-form culturally important statues. ASCE Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering. DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)CP.1943-5487.0000508.
Wittich, C.E., Hutchinson, T.C., Wood, R.L., and Kuester, F. (2012). Survey and Characterization of Culturally Important Statues in Florence, Italy. Structural Systems Research Project Report Series. SSRP 12/10. Department of Structural Engineering, University of California, San Diego. La Jolla, CA. | |
| UNESCO World Heritage Site | Historic Centre of Florence |
| Collection Date | 2011-08-11 to 2011-08-11 |
| Publication Date | 2026-01-26 |
| License Type | CC BY-NC |
| Model Information |
| Reuse Score | B - High-Quality Model without Georeferencing |
| Citation |
| Christine Wittich, Tara Hutchinson, Richard Lee Wood, Maurizio Seracini, Falko Kuester, Center of Interdisciplinary Science for Art, Architecture and Archaeology (CISA3), Cultural Heritage Engineering Initiative (CHEI) 2026: Statues - Palazzo Vecchio - Florence - LiDAR - Terrestrial, Photogrammetry - Terrestrial. Distributed by Open Heritage 3D. https://doi.org/10.34946/D6M59H |
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