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Visual Assessment Tools Show User’s Perspective on How a Project Will Look

Visualization of the current topography for permit application plan set
Tetra Tech’s Solid Waste Solutions expert Randy Nolden discusses how a visual impact assessment helps solid waste project stakeholders see proposed site conditions.

Understanding what viewers will be able to see—and what they will not be able to see—can be key to project approval and success.

This article was originally published in Waste Advantage Magazine.

It is a fact of life that people rarely want solid waste facilities to be located near them. A visual impact assessment can play a part in appeasing adjacent property owners by showing what the project will look like when it is complete. Powerful software tools can help tell the story from the perspective of an adjacent property owner or nearby residence.

The visual assessment starts with a desktop study to determine key observation points (KOP). Designers then go out to the site to take photos and gather accurate GPS data from the photo locations and reference points in the photos. Our Tetra Tech teams also use CAD and GIS software to create a line-of-sight analysis, using field photos along with plan view imagery to clearly show what can and cannot be seen in the line-of-sight profile. This data is then brought back to the office and added to 3D models to create highly accurate representations of what the site will look like when complete.

Here is a step-by-step description of the visualization process that enabled officials at Marathon County Landfill, near Wausau, Wisconsin, to help the community envision the visual impact of a planned expansion. The County was required to “include visual projections from at least four key observation points and include leaf-on and leaf-off conditions.”

Step 1—Assemble Plans

Use final plans to prepare a 3D model, including a landscaping plan if available (Figure 1).

Figure 1: Final site plans are used as the basis for the 3D model
Figure 1: Final site plans are used as the basis for the 3D model

Step 2—Analyze the Viewshed and Determine KOPs

Run a viewshed analysis using the proposed site data along with LiDAR data to determine KOPs, intersections, and adjacent property owners. Tetra Tech teams typically like to take photos near adjacent properties that fall within the proposed facility’s viewshed. It is important to work with the client to determine the appropriate KOPs for visualizations (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Visual simulations are typically done for several areas around a site called key observation points (KOPs)
Figure 2: Visual simulations are typically done for several areas around a site called key observation points (KOPs)

Step 3—Take Field Photos

Once the KOPs have been determined, we send field staff out to take photos. We follow a strict protocol, which includes use of a digital camera, tripod, and GPS equipment to document photo location coordinates and reference location coordinates and descriptions. This enables designers to tie the model into the photo horizontally and vertically in the visualization software (Figure 3).

Figure 3: Field photos use a protocol that ties the model into the photo horizontally and vertically in the visualization software
Figure 3: Field photos use a protocol that ties the model into the photo horizontally and vertically in the visualization software

Step 4—Use Photoshop to Clear Trees

If needed, we photoshop the original photo to show the site after clearing and grubbing. Aerial imagery and LiDAR are used to determine heights of trees in the background and create an approximate updated background for the image (Figure 4).

Figure 4: If necessary, designers use Photoshop on the original photo to show the site after clearing and grubbing
Figure 4: If necessary, designers use Photoshop on the original photo to show the site after clearing and grubbing

Step 5—Export the Model and Create the Final Image

We use the field photo data and the 3D model to export an image of the proposed site along with the photoshopped image as the background. If necessary, we perform additional photoshopping to show the proposed facility in perspective. The final image includes a viewpoint location map, proposed and existing conditions, and technical information (Figure 5).

Figure 5: Data from field photos and the 3D model are used to create a final image showing the facility
Figure 5: Data from field photos and the 3D model are used to create a final image showing the facility

Step 6—Finish Any Additional Requirements

In this case, we were required to show leaf-on conditions depicting the site with full foliage on the surrounding trees to provide an accurate photo representation of the final design conditions at any location. There were no adjacent property owners, as photos were taken along a bike path and the Ice Age National Scenic Trail. The visualizations show precisely what the proposed facilities will eventually look like from this vantage point (Figure 6).

Figure 6: Additional data can be provided of final design conditions at any location to develop an accurate photo-representation
Figure 6: Additional data can be provided of final design conditions at any location to develop an accurate photo-representation

Another example shown below illustrates how much easier it is to describe a proposed site expansion with a visual simulation rather than a plan sheet. These images of a large midwestern landfill show the plan view taken from a permit application plan set (Figure 7). Figure 8 is the visualization of the permitted top of final cover grades, and Figure 9 shows the proposed expansion top of final grades.

Figure 7: Plan view from permit application plan
Figure 7: Plan view from permit application plan
Figure 8: Visualization of the permitted top of final cover grades
Figure 8: Visualization of the permitted top of final cover grades
Figure 9: Proposed expansion top of final grades
Figure 9: Proposed expansion top of final grades

As technology continues to move forward, Tetra Tech design teams are investigating how augmented reality might be used in the future. The ultimate goal is to provide clients, regulatory agencies, and adjacent property owners an app for their phone or tablet that will let them see the site dynamically. Rather than the static view presented with current visual simulations, users would be able to have a dynamic view of the proposed site from any location surrounding the site.

About the author

Headshot of Randy Nolden

Randy Nolden

Randy Nolden is a project manager and senior designer.

He has more than 20 years of experience conducting visual impact assessments as part of his civil and environmental engineering design, construction, and surveying work for solid waste landfills. He serves as a project manager, project designer, resident project representative, or office engineer for various major municipal and industrial solid waste design and construction projects.

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