Mayor of Rome
Walter Veltroni officiated Monday at the
first public viewing of "Rome Reborn 1.0," a 10-year
project begun at UCLA and based at the
An international team of
archaeologists, architects and computer specialists from
"Rome Reborn" encompasses
nearly the entire ancient city within the 13-mile-long Aurelian Walls as it
appeared in A.D. 320. At that time,
The simulation is a true
three-dimensional model that runs in real time and allows users to navigate the
environment with complete freedom, moving in any direction at will. Viewers can
enter such important public buildings as the Roman Senate House, the Colosseum,
and the
As new discoveries are made, "Rome Reborn 1.0" can be easily updated to reflect the latest knowledge about the ancient city. In future versions, the project will include other phases in the evolution of the city, from the late Bronze Age in the 10th century B.C. to the Gothic Wars in the 6th century. Video clips and still images can be viewed at www.romereborn.virginia.edu and at www.etc.ucla.edu.
In recent years, scientists, historians and archaeologists around the world have embraced the 3-D modeling of cultural heritage sites. Information technology has permitted them to recreate buildings and monuments that no longer exist or to digitally restore sites that have been damaged by the passage of time. The results can be used both in research, to test new theories, and in teaching, to take students on virtual tours of the historical sites they are studying. By several orders of magnitude, "Rome Reborn 1.0" is the most ambitious project ever undertaken.
"'Rome Reborn 1.0' is the
continuation of five centuries of research by scholars, architects and artists
since the Renaissance who have attempted to restore the ruins of the ancient city
with words, maps and images," said project director Bernard Frischer, UCLA
professor emeritus and director of the Institute for Advanced Technology in the
Humanities at the
"This amazing model allows us
to appreciate individual buildings of ancient
"This is the first time that engineers have succeeded in creating a hybrid computer model of an entire city based on born-digital and reborn-digital elements," said Gabriele Guidi of the industrial design, art, communications and fashion lab at the Polytechnic University of Milan. "The project was an enormous technical challenge, and now that we have successfully met it, we can easily start building up a library of other city models in museums around the world."
Favro and Frischer began the "Rome
Reborn" at UCLA in 1996, collaborating with UCLA students from classics,
architecture and urban design, who fashioned the digital models with continuous
advice from expert archaeologists. As the project evolved, it became
collaborative at an international scale. In 2004, the project moved its
administrative home to the
Many individuals and institutions contributed to "Rome Reborn" including UCLA (www.etc.ucla.edu), the University of Virginia (www.iath.virginia.edu) and Milan's Polytechnic University (www.polimi.it). Project advisers included scholars from the Italian Ministry of Culture, the Museum of Roman Civilization (Rome), Bath University, Bryn Mawr College, the National Research Council of Italy, the German Archaeological Institute, Ohio University, UCLA, the University of Florence, the University of Lecce, the University of Rome ("La Sapienza"), the University of Virginia and the Vatican Museums.
The first sponsors of the
project were Kirk Mathews and the Creative Kids Education Foundation. Other
sponsors have included: Alitalia, the Institute for Advanced Technology in the
Humanities at the
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