Abstract
The built environment consists of plenty of physical assets with which we interact on a daily basis. In order to improve not only our built environment, but also our interaction with that environment, we would benefit a lot from semantic representations of this environment. This not only includes buildings, but also large infrastructure (bridges, tunnels, waterways, underground systems), and geospatial data. With this special issue, an insight is given into the current state of the art in terms of semantic technologies and interoperability in this built environment. This editorial not only summarizes the content of the Special Issue on Semantic Technologies and interoperability in the Built Environment, it also provides a brief overview of the current state of the art in general in terms of standardisation and community efforts.
Semantics in the built environment
The built environment encompasses a variety of artifacts ranging from buildings to infrastructures. These artifacts are linked at different scales and in various ways. Namely, relations can be found between elements in a singular building, furniture, street lights, and so forth to elements and concepts covering the entire city, such as infrastructure, traffic, and people flows. Apart from this multiplicity of artifacts, the built environment also gathers multiple stakeholders who collaborate in various ways. Collaboration and interaction not only happens in the built environment as it exists on a daily basis, but even more so throughout all the design, construction and operation phases taking place within the built environment. This includes specialists (architects, engineers, and contractors), but also local administrators, facility managers, and citizens.
A large part of this environment is governed by the Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) industry. An effective collaboration and interoperability between these different actors throughout the life-cycle of the built environment has always been a key challenge to this industry. Data from stakeholders is modeled and published in various languages and scales, in particular using Building Information Modelling (BIM) tools [2], and data evolves considerably over time. Hence, maintaining data consistency throughout the whole life-cycle of a building, especially during the design and construction phases, is a fundamental challenge to this industry.
Beyond the design and construction phases, important other amounts of data are present as well in the built environment in general. This data is used to make the built environment function on a daily basis. Devices are used to retrieve information from the built environment (monitoring systems at the building and urban level) and models of the artifacts interact with multiple tools (simulations of the building energy performance, level of occupancy in buildings) in order to take more informed decisions to improve the built environment. Therefore, flexible mechanisms are required to facilitate data exchange between the different actors intervening at the different stages, and to provide the required interoperability between data, tools and devices.
Standard data models such as the Industry Foundation Classes (IFC1
From the 8 papers submitted to the special issue, the following 5 were selected for publication. The papers accepted in this special issue are representative examples of how Semantic Web technologies can be applied to make a better use of data models for the built environment. Two papers focus on the energy efficiency of buildings and cities, namely Esnaola-Gonzalez et al. [3] and Bonino and De Russis [1]. Building home automation is addressed by two papers from a perspective of a social network of agents (Ruta et al. [8]) and an all-seeing smart building (Marroquin et al. [4]). Zhang et al. [9] propose a SPARQL extension for querying building data in IFC.
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Semantics and linked data for the built environment
As is clear from the papers published in this Special Issue, the built environment deals with lots of semantics, of various kinds and covering many domains. Because of the wide range of stakeholders involved in the built environment, especially in design and construction phases, standards and agreements and processes are of utmost importance, especially to the AEC industry. One of the most important standards in this regard is the IFC data model, as produced by buildingSMART. This data model consists of hundreds of entities and is defined using the EXPRESS information modelling language. Furthermore, there is a strong focus on the representation of 3D geometry. Notwithstanding the existence of an ifcOWL ontology [5], IFC is not so easily accessible or usable using Semantic Web technologies. This low usability is mostly due to the strong reliance on EXPRESS, the large size and complexity of the data model and the non-modular structure of IFC.
A number of other ontologies and data models have been produced in the last few years, mainly under the auspices of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), aiming to enable the representation of the built environment in a Semantic Web-friendly manner. This includes the ontologies that are produced in the W3C Linked Building Data (LBD) Community Group.2
Starting from this modular structure, it is easier to connect semantic representations of buildings with semantic representations of the rest of the built environment, thereby linking to many of the ontologies and topics that are covered by this Special Issue, namely DogOnt, EEPSA, SAREF, SOSA, SSN, CityGML, GeoSPARQL, and so on. As an example, many of the work behind the included article about BimSPARQL [9] is inspired by the GeoSPARQL principles. Using these ontologies, plenty applications are within reach, based on Semantic Web technologies, which have been unaccessible for many stakeholders in the built environment, including (1) the direct combination of sensor data with building element information, (2) the combination of geospatial and building data, and (3) real-time event detection and then analysis of building use patterns.
Many of the contributed papers and the above efforts align with the three main advantages of semantic web technologies to the AEC domain that were outlined by Pauwels et al. [6]: interoperability, linking across domains, and logical inference and proofs. As indicated by Pauwels et al. [6], interoperability requires standardization more than it requires the use of one or the other technology. Therefore, semantic web technologies have only a minor contribution there. In terms of linking data and domains, it is clear from this special issue and all the above developments that this is a main contribution of relying on semantic web technologies. Finally, logical inference and proof is less present in the special issue, even though this is a unique feature offered by semantic web technologies.
In conclusion, Semantic Web technologies allow communities to build a decentralized and easily extensible semantic network in a modular fashion for the built environment. This allows a global community of developers to build a myriad of applications that were not feasible or available before on such a scale, covering not only the AEC domain, but also topics and ventures like Smart Cities, semantic sensor networks, home automation systems, smart grids, and geographical information systems.
