Object Based Image Analysis for Urban Mapping and City Planning in Belgium

The 'Object Based Image Analysis' approach (further, OBIA) becomes increasingly popular and is being used for classifying VHR remote sensing images. The use of this innovative approach for urban mapping is highly effective as it makes possible to include information about features, shapes and other characteristics of urban space and to interpret them for the studies of land cover types. Using very high resolution (VHR) image for mapping enables to identify land cover and land use types within urban environment. Hence, the OBIA approach for processing remote sensing data creates effective tools... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Lemenkova Polina
Dokumenttyp: conferencePaper
Erscheinungsdatum: 2015
Schlagwörter: OBIA / Object Based Image Analysis / Image classification / Image processing / Remote sensing / GIS / Urban studies / City development / Urban sprawl / mapping / geospatial analysis
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27384626
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://zenodo.org/record/2300246

The 'Object Based Image Analysis' approach (further, OBIA) becomes increasingly popular and is being used for classifying VHR remote sensing images. The use of this innovative approach for urban mapping is highly effective as it makes possible to include information about features, shapes and other characteristics of urban space and to interpret them for the studies of land cover types. Using very high resolution (VHR) image for mapping enables to identify land cover and land use types within urban environment. Hence, the OBIA approach for processing remote sensing data creates effective tools for urban studies. Furthermore, the application of the priori knowledge is necessary for the case studies where additional knowledge can implement detailed information into the existing databases, e.g. information on land cover and land use types, roads, buildings, vegetation units (parks), etc. Particularly useful becomes a priori knowledge for incomplete or outdated databases (containing e.g. missing areas, or those inside of closed blocks, etc). Additional knowledge about the city structures and urban features should be included while interpreting image. The case study of the current research is focused on the eastern part of Brussels, Belgium. The very high resolution image was processed using eCognition software for detecting typical urban objects (e.g. buildings and houses, trees, roads and streets etc). The methodology is detailed below. ; P. Lemenkova. "Object Based Image Analysis for Urban Mapping and City Planning in Belgium". In: Virtual Simulation, Prototyping and Industrial Design. Proceedings of the 2nd International Scientific and Practical Conference (Tambov State Technical University TGTU, Nov. 17–19, 2015). Ed. by V. A. Nemtinov. Vol. 2.2. Russia, Tambov: TGTU Press, 2015, pp. 44–48. isbn: 978-5-8265-1499-3. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.7210964. url: https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=26577194