This paper presents a Scan-to-Scoring framework supporting the Conservation Maintenance Record (CMR). The proposed methodological approach integrates expert-based assessment with interoperable digital environments (XLS, VPL, CAD/E-HBIM) to compute, manage and visualize a synthetic conservation risk index directly on semantically defined point clouds and 3D feature-based models. The main goal of the proposed evaluation system is the operational formalization and spatial mapping of a repeatable and transparent risk scoring process, enabling cross-asset comparison, periodic monitoring and maintenance planning. Geometric processing, including manual and semi-automatic segmentation, supports score attribution and visualisation at different scales. The XLS/VPL algorithm produces numerical and colour-coded outputs synchronized with the 3D representation. The workflow is suitable for both artefacts and architectural contexts. The innovation lies in the algorithmic and repeatable formalization of a traditionally qualitative assessment process, demonstrating adaptability, feasibility and operational applicability to support preventive conservation, monitoring and maintenance planning through an operational and accessible digital workflow.
Scan-to-Scoring: An Algorithmic Model for Conservation Maintenance Records
Lanzara, Emanuela
;Improta, Ilaria
2026-01-01
Abstract
This paper presents a Scan-to-Scoring framework supporting the Conservation Maintenance Record (CMR). The proposed methodological approach integrates expert-based assessment with interoperable digital environments (XLS, VPL, CAD/E-HBIM) to compute, manage and visualize a synthetic conservation risk index directly on semantically defined point clouds and 3D feature-based models. The main goal of the proposed evaluation system is the operational formalization and spatial mapping of a repeatable and transparent risk scoring process, enabling cross-asset comparison, periodic monitoring and maintenance planning. Geometric processing, including manual and semi-automatic segmentation, supports score attribution and visualisation at different scales. The XLS/VPL algorithm produces numerical and colour-coded outputs synchronized with the 3D representation. The workflow is suitable for both artefacts and architectural contexts. The innovation lies in the algorithmic and repeatable formalization of a traditionally qualitative assessment process, demonstrating adaptability, feasibility and operational applicability to support preventive conservation, monitoring and maintenance planning through an operational and accessible digital workflow.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
