Skip to main content

GeoSLAM showcases 3D mobile mapping for GIS at ESRI User Conference 2017

3D mobile mapping specialist GeoSLAM, a Silver ESRI Business Partner, is participating in the international ESRI User Conference at San Diego Convention Centre on 10-14 July to demonstrate its live digital 3D modelling capability.
July 10, 2017 Read time: 1 min

3D mobile mapping specialist GeoSLAM, a Silver 50 ESRI Business Partner, is participating in the international ESRI User Conference at San Diego Convention Centre on 10-14 July to demonstrate its live digital 3D modelling capability.

GeoSLAM will be scanning the exhibition hall and the Convention Centre using its handheld laser scanning solution, the ZEB-REVO and turning it into a live digital 3D model, to show how the ZEB REVO enables users to rapidly generate and integrate 3D models into their ArcGIS workflows. The system is already in use around the world in a variety of industries such as facilities and asset management, forestry, mining, surveying and engineering.

GeoSLAM will be working with the ESRI Team at the ESRI 3D Island stand in the main hall of the Convention Center, providing live demonstrations of the handheld, mobile surveying system and showcasing how quickly and easily the captured 3D data can be imported into and used in ESRI’s ArcGIS and CityEngine software.

Related Content

  • September 20, 2012
    Developing integrated transport networks
    A major initiative in managing numerous transport networks as a single system has moved into a significant phase with design of sophisticated new ITS systems. Jon Masters reports. Detailed design work is under way on two pilot projects pursuing a common principle – that transportation can be made more efficient or effective if the various networks and modes of travel are managed as a whole system. This is the central tenet of the US Department of Transportation’s (USDOT) Integrated Corridor Management (ICM)
  • June 20, 2016
    Regulating rural road use
    David Crawford looks at problems facing indigenous communities and those unfamiliar with driving in rural areas. While it is well known that the fatality rate for road crashes in rural areas is higher than in towns and cities, some groups suffer far more than others. For instance, the rates of death and serious injury from vehicle accidents is much higher for American Indian and Alaska Native (AI and AN) populations living in rural tribal lands than for any of the country’s other ethnic populations. Crashes
  • October 8, 2015
    Esri software powers Lithuania project
    The government of Lithuania has used Esri’s software to create a website – which went live this week - covering all of its transport network rather than simply one urban area. “It’s a multimodal journey planner for the whole country,” explains Terry C. Bills, Global Transportation Industry Manager at Esri. “So it’s a question of stitching together city systems with inter-city ones and pulling them together in a seamless way.”
  • January 14, 2020
    Colorado DoT locates data-rich environment
    Colorado DoT and Esri have been cooperating to unlock data’s potential. Jason Barnes finds out what that has to do with firing a howitzer at snowy mountains – and exactly why things that happened in the past point the way towards future proofing