The operation and maintenance phase is the longest and most expensive life-cycle period of building facilities. Operators need to perform activities to provide a comfortable living and working environment and to upkeep equipment to prevent functionality failures. For that purpose they manually browse, sort and select dispersed and unformatted facility information before actually going on the site. Although some software tools have been introduced, they still spent 50% of the on-site work on inspection target localization and navigation. To improve these manual, time consuming and tedious procedures, the authors previously presented a framework that uses BIM-based Augmented Reality (AR) to support facility maintenance tasks. The proposed workflow contains AR supported activities, namely AR-based indoor navigation and AR-based maintenance instructions. An inherent problem of AR is marker definition and detection. As introduced, indoor natural markers such as exit signs, fire extinguisher location signs, and appliances’ labels were identified to be suitable for both navigation and maintenance instructions. However, small markers, changing lighting conditions, low detection frame rates and accuracies might prevent the proposed approach from being practical. In this paper the performance of natural marker detection will be evaluated under different configurations, varying marker types, marker sizes, camera resolutions and lighting conditions. The detection performance will be measured using pre-defined metrics incorporating detection accuracy, tracking quality, frame rates, and robustness. The result will be a set of recommendations on what configurations are most suitable and practical within the given framework.
[1]
Thomas Liebich,et al.
Facility Management Handover Model View
,
2013,
J. Comput. Civ. Eng..
[2]
Ömer Akin,et al.
Augmented reality-based computational fieldwork support for equipment operations and maintenance
,
2011
.
[3]
Vineet R. Kamat,et al.
High-precision identification of contextual information in location-aware engineering applications
,
2009,
Adv. Eng. Informatics.
[4]
Steven K. Feiner,et al.
Exploring the Benefits of Augmented Reality Documentation for Maintenance and Repair
,
2011,
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics.
[5]
Chien-Ho Ko.
RFID-based building maintenance system
,
2009
.
[6]
Burcu Akinci,et al.
Tracking Components and Maintenance History within a Facility Utilizing Radio Frequency Identification Technology
,
2007
.
[7]
Bo Zhu,et al.
Role-based access to facilities lifecycle information on RFID tags
,
2011,
Adv. Eng. Informatics.
[8]
Vineet R. Kamat,et al.
Evaluation of position tracking technologies for user localization in indoor construction environments
,
2009
.