A Hybrid Semantic-Geometric Approach for Clutter-Resistant Floorplan Generation from Building Point Clouds

  • Kim, Seongyong (Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology) ;
  • Yajima, Yosuke (Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Machines, Georgia Institute of Technology) ;
  • Park, Jisoo (Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology) ;
  • Chen, Jingdao (Computer Science and Engineering, Mississippi State University) ;
  • Cho, Yong K. (Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology)
  • Published : 2022.06.20

Abstract

Building Information Modeling (BIM) technology is a key component of modern construction engineering and project management workflows. As-is BIM models that represent the spatial reality of a project site can offer crucial information to stakeholders for construction progress monitoring, error checking, and building maintenance purposes. Geometric methods for automatically converting raw scan data into BIM models (Scan-to-BIM) often fail to make use of higher-level semantic information in the data. Whereas, semantic segmentation methods only output labels at the point level without creating object level models that is necessary for BIM. To address these issues, this research proposes a hybrid semantic-geometric approach for clutter-resistant floorplan generation from laser-scanned building point clouds. The input point clouds are first pre-processed by normalizing the coordinate system and removing outliers. Then, a semantic segmentation network based on PointNet++ is used to label each point as ceiling, floor, wall, door, stair, and clutter. The clutter points are removed whereas the wall, door, and stair points are used for 2D floorplan generation. A region-growing segmentation algorithm paired with geometric reasoning rules is applied to group the points together into individual building elements. Finally, a 2-fold Random Sample Consensus (RANSAC) algorithm is applied to parameterize the building elements into 2D lines which are used to create the output floorplan. The proposed method is evaluated using the metrics of precision, recall, Intersection-over-Union (IOU), Betti error, and warping error.

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Acknowledgement

This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) (Award #: OIA-2040735). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of NSF.