Dubai Telegraph - High-tech race to map Ukraine's damaged historic buildings

EUR -
AED 4.172583
AFN 72.714994
ALL 94.095258
AMD 416.93039
ANG 2.034203
AOA 1042.439173
ARS 1678.393563
AUD 1.646838
AWG 2.045106
AZN 1.932124
BAM 1.95366
BBD 2.282559
BDT 139.397284
BGN 1.921128
BHD 0.428303
BIF 3385.787417
BMD 1.13617
BND 1.47037
BOB 7.831145
BRL 5.903087
BSD 1.133338
BTN 106.927973
BWP 15.464853
BYN 3.22531
BYR 22268.937374
BZD 2.279363
CAD 1.613407
CDF 2579.106417
CHF 0.921088
CLF 0.026568
CLP 1045.651444
CNY 7.715164
CNH 7.728059
COP 3916.992467
CRC 515.823542
CUC 1.13617
CUP 30.108512
CVE 110.140459
CZK 24.263314
DJF 201.818011
DKK 7.474359
DOP 66.785364
DZD 151.644677
EGP 56.259632
ERN 17.042554
ETB 180.253457
FJD 2.574679
FKP 0.863433
GBP 0.861405
GEL 2.999465
GGP 0.863433
GHS 12.746587
GIP 0.863433
GMD 82.364658
GNF 9930.989042
GTQ 8.646261
GYD 237.121874
HKD 8.907746
HNL 30.35879
HRK 7.533145
HTG 148.124464
HUF 354.06242
IDR 20476.060681
ILS 3.389111
IMP 0.863433
INR 107.255213
IQD 1488.383059
IRR 1562290.935301
ISK 143.997977
JEP 0.863433
JMD 178.622739
JOD 0.805514
JPY 183.844277
KES 147.167707
KGS 99.358247
KHR 4556.042688
KMF 493.097649
KPW 1022.553644
KRW 1756.627155
KWD 0.351815
KYD 0.944449
KZT 549.268583
LAK 25069.596973
LBP 101492.423899
LKR 381.944839
LRD 206.260402
LSL 18.848876
LTL 3.354815
LVL 0.687258
LYD 7.277995
MAD 10.697607
MDL 20.116607
MGA 4831.642929
MKD 61.621185
MMK 2385.4291
MNT 4071.833326
MOP 9.152312
MRU 45.526079
MUR 54.75243
MVR 17.553721
MWK 1973.527785
MXN 19.891724
MYR 4.680112
MZN 72.597053
NAD 18.849181
NGN 1562.427472
NIO 41.594972
NOK 11.221204
NPR 171.083805
NZD 2.013504
OMR 0.436864
PAB 1.133318
PEN 3.887952
PGK 4.973595
PHP 69.722796
PKR 315.39418
PLN 4.2841
PYG 6925.382454
QAR 4.141347
RON 5.232743
RSD 117.37322
RUB 85.441876
RWF 1665.460754
SAR 4.266307
SBD 9.148389
SCR 15.044871
SDG 681.702207
SEK 11.070417
SGD 1.473589
SHP 0.848266
SLE 28.174058
SLL 23824.926728
SOS 647.684732
SRD 42.401842
STD 23516.430757
STN 24.473404
SVC 9.916961
SYP 125.583284
SZL 18.765698
THB 37.928752
TJS 10.477437
TMT 3.976596
TND 3.337505
TOP 2.735626
TRY 52.962799
TTD 7.697432
TWD 36.197931
TZS 2975.557203
UAH 50.960498
UGX 4193.258468
USD 1.13617
UYU 45.468786
UZS 13613.845773
VES 705.281089
VND 29904.001617
VUV 136.136759
WST 3.156026
XAF 655.218994
XAG 0.019775
XAU 0.000283
XCD 3.070557
XCG 2.042526
XDR 0.814896
XOF 655.227635
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.118684
ZAR 18.750127
ZMK 10226.89091
ZMW 20.456229
ZWL 365.846365
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18

    -0.89%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

High-tech race to map Ukraine's damaged historic buildings
High-tech race to map Ukraine's damaged historic buildings / Photo: Genya SAVILOV - AFP

High-tech race to map Ukraine's damaged historic buildings

Many of Ukraine's historic monuments have been destroyed in the three months since Russia invaded, but cultural experts are working to conserve their memory using cutting-edge technology and 3D scans.

Text size:

One of them is volunteer French engineer Emmanuel Durand, a specialist in 3D data acquisition, who is assisting a bevy of architects, engineers, historic building experts and a museum director to record buildings in Kyiv, Lviv, Chernigiv and Kharkiv.

Durand steps over a jumbled pile of beams and crunches over the rubble that was once Kharkiv's 19th-century fire station.

He plants his laser scanner, a sort of tripod with a pivoting head, in a strategic corner of the severely damaged building.

The redbrick fire station and its watchtower, built in 1887, are a monument to Kharkiv's industrial revolution.

Durand's gadget records the building from all angles.

"The scanner records 500,000 points per second. We'll get 10 million points from this location. Then we'll change location and go round the whole building, outside and inside. A billion points in all," he explains.

At the end of the day, Durand assembles all the data on a computer "like the pieces of a jigsaw" to digitally reconstruct the building.

The result is a perfect reproduction, accurate to within five millimetres (a fraction of an inch) that can be rotated in any direction or sliced into sections. You can even see the holes where blast waves from explosions have damaged the structure.

"This enables us to map out the building for the future. That could help us work out if anything has moved, which is important for safety purposes, and see what can be restored and what can't. It's also useful from a historical point of view," he says.

"We've got the actual missile-damaged building and an exact replica of how it used to look."

- 'Cultural genocide'-

In Kharkiv alone, around 500 buildings are listed as being of historic architectural significance. Most are in the dense historic city centre, on which Russian airstrikes are concentrated, according to architect Kateryna Kuplytska, a member of the body documenting damaged heritage sites.

She estimates that over a hundred of them have been hit already.

And while Russian troops have loosened their noose around Ukraine's second city, shells still rain down with regular monotony.

New explosions and blast waves, inclement weather, construction work and site visits will all contribute to hastening the destruction of these already weakened buildings, Kuplytska says.

"That's why it's essential to record them in accurate detail so we can plan urgent interventions that will stabilise the structures" and preserve their memory, she explains.

"Recording the destruction will also assist in criminal proceedings. We see serious damage to heritage across the whole country. It's genocide towards Ukrainian people and genocide towards Ukrainian culture," she says.

After two days at the fire station, Durand moves on to the economics faculty at the Karazin National University in Kharkiv. It is located right next to the imposing headquarters of the Ukrainian secret services, which is being targeted by the Russians and has been hit on numerous occasions.

The current iteration of the economics faculty was built in Soviet times. It was designed by Serhiy Tymoshenko, the father of the "modern Ukrainian" style of architecture of the early 20th-century, and is one of the country's first reinforced concrete structures.

Some critics suggest it is futile to document historic buildings in such meticulous detail while the war is still raging and people are dying every day.

But Tetyana Pylyptshuk, the director of the Kharkiv literary museum, begs to disagree.

"Culture is the basis of everything. If culture had developed well, people probably wouldn't be dying and there wouldn't be a war," she said.

Pylyptshuk, who also sits on the commission on damaged historical sites, has sent most of her museum collections to western Ukraine to protect them from damage -- and from looting, should Russian troops overrun Kharkiv.

"Today, everyone realises this. Maybe they were not so attentive to our cultural heritage before... but when you lose it, it hurts."

D.Farook--DT