In 2015, National Geographic profiled Tallon and his unique scanning process, highlighting his digital imaging of the Notre Dame Cathedral. For centuries, the only tools we had to measure medieval buildings and structures were primitive strings and rulers, pencils and plumb bobs but by turning to 21st-century technology, Tallon was able to tease out the secrets of this miraculous structure.
If I had texts at every point, I could look in the texts and try to get back into the heads of the builders, Tallon said to Nat Geo. I dont have it, so its detective work for me.
For his scans of Notre Dame, Tallon recorded data from more than 50 locations in and around the cathedral, resulting in a staggering one billion points of data.
Each scan begins by mounting the laser onto a tripod and placing in the center of the structure. The laser sweeps around the area in every direction, and as it hits a surface, the beam bounces back, recording the exact placement and surface of whatever buttress or column it landed on by measuring the time it took the beam to return. Every measurement is recorded as a colored dot, combining together into a detailed picture, like the color pixels of a digital photograph.
Eventually those millions of dots form a three-dimensional snapshot of the cathedral, and the resulting images are meticulously precise; if the scan is done properly, Tallon told Nat Geo, it should be accurate within 5 millimeters.
What Needs to be Rebuilt
“According to The New York Times, it took less than an hour for the fire to spread from the attic of the cathedral and engulf the roof, toppling the central spire. Construction on the cathedral began in the year 1163 and finished in 1345, according to an NYT piece about the history of the cathedral, and the wooden roof contained historic beams from the year 1220, all of which were destroyed by the blaze.
Support for the recovery efforts have begun pouring in, with wealthy Parisians and companies pledging more than $450 million in donations to Notre Dames restoration.
Despite the extensive damage, the NYT reports that most of the priceless artifacts and the stone structure of the cathedral remain intact though only time will tell how long itll take to restore the beloved structure to a semblance of its former glory.”
cutting-edge imagining technology, like books???
Would you like to see the US Constitution (original document) or a modern printout laying in its place?
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Unfortunately they can’t just 3D print up a thousand skilled stone masons, labor to haul the limestone from the quarry, and a few centuries to make it all happen.
I think we’re going to need a bigger 3D printer . . .
Amazing, thank you for posting Windy :)
Wow!! Amazing news!!
Now, let’s hope and pray that they rebuild it precisly as it was.
St Sophia in Istanbul was converted from a cathedral to a mosque.
Mr. Tallon died of cancer age 49 in Nov 2018, shortly after completing his scans. Who was to know that his efforts would so soon become a legacy immortalizing his name?
Yeah, but they do not look like a mosque. The new one will. Macron will see to it and deny it looks like a mosque and if you say it looks like a mosque you will be guilty of hate and punished.
whew, that wore me out