From: Mike Bevan <mike@vrnews.demon.co.uk>
Subject: CONF: Virtual Heritage '95
Date: October 10, 1995
Message-ID: <9510091744.aa05831@relay-3.mail.demon.net>


From: Mike Bevan <mike@vrnews.demon.co.uk>n

Virtual Heritage '95
The Assembly Rooms
Bath, England
November 22nd

Virtual Heritage '95, organised by VR NEWS, will be the world's first
conference dedicated to the use of Virtual Reality and related
technologies for heritage reconstruction and presentation. Bath is a
World Heritage City in the West of England, under two hours by road
from Heathrow airport. An abbreviated version of the press release,
and the conference program follow.

Press Release

Heritage reconstruction is one of the fast-growing uses of Virtual
Reality, with immense potential. Prehistoric settlements, early
military fortifications, medieval cities, architectural masterpieces
destroyed by war or time, the furnishings and ornaments and tools of
the past - these can all now be re-created as full-scale virtual
reality models, and examined and entered and explored. Archaeologists
are using VR as a tool for visualising and experimenting with
reconstructions.  Many educationalists see VR reconstructions as a way
to make the teaching of history more comprehensible and
enjoyable. Those responsible for publicly-accessible ancient monuments
are interested in incorporating VR 'walkarounds' for conservation
reasons, while tourism and development agencies see huge commercial
potential in VR-enhanced visitor access to heritage sites.

The projects which will be demonstrated and described at the
conference were selected to show the great variety and quality of the
work that is being done internationally. The speakers will explain
what is involved in heritage reconstructions at a practical level -
technology, skills, resources, costs, timescales. They will also offer
their views on less tangible matters, authenticity for example - is
Virtual Heritage a scholarly pursuit, an opportunity for artistic
expression, or just 'show business' - and how visible are the
demarkation lines?

Speaker List:

Conference Chairman - Alan Benjamin OBE

Alan Benjamin has both led and served the European computer industry
with great distinction for over thirty years. A highly successful
businessman and communicator, he was the first Director General of
both the UK and European Computing Services Associations, Director of
Corporate Communication for ICL, Chairman of the National Economic
Development Organisation Working Group on Electronic Applications, and
Chairman of the acclaimed 'Information Technology Year 1982' national
awareness campaign, following which he was awarded the Order of the
British Empire by Her Majesty the Queen.

His wide range of interests and appointments include membership of the
Council of the City University and of the board of the London Symphony
Orchestra, and leadership of the multi-disciplinary study team
preparing proposals for the Northumberland Virtual Reality project,
details of which will be presented for the first time publicly at this
conference.


Eben Gay
The Fortress at Buhen, and the Learning Sites Project:

The Learning Sites Project, led by archaeologist Dr Donald H. Sanders
(Editor, Art & Architecture Thesaurus, J.Paul Getty Trust), seeks to
integrate archaeological data with the capabilities of virtual reality
to further education, research, and the preservation of cultural
heritage.  Interactive virtual worlds are being built using
archaeological evidence from sites in Egypt, Greece, Nubia and
Turkey. The presentation, by Eben Gay (Virtual Reality consultant, ERG
Engineering Inc.), will include a videotaped exploration of Buhen, the
Egyptian site that began the project, and selections from sites
currently under development.


Vincent Berge
Cluny Abbey

The Abbey of Cluny, once the greatest and most magnificently adorned
church in Christendom, was vandalised and demolished in 1793,
following the French revolution. Its recent graphical reconstruction,
supported technically and logistically by IBM France, constitutes one
of the most brilliant and successful examples of 'virtual heritage' to
date. Vincent Berge, now European Virtual Reality Manager for IBM, was
closely involved in the reconstruction. He will set out the background
to the project, explain how the work was carried out, and discuss the
difficult authenticity decisions which are faced in an undertaking
such as this.


Prof. Robert Stone
The State of the Virtual Art

Bob Stone is Director of the UK National Centre for Virtual
Environments, and one of the world's most respected researchers in the
field of Virtual Reality. In the late 1980s he created the VR
laboratory at the National Advanced Robotics Research Centre, in
Salford, and developed it into a leading centre of excellence in the
practical application of virtual reality technologies. In addition to
industrial and medical VR projects, the National Centre has recently
undertaken a project to re-create in 3D some of the paintings of
L.S. Lowry, the celebrated English artist. Prof.  Stone will outline
the current status of VR technology relevant to heritage
reconstruction and presentation, and will show the results of the
Lowry project.


Prof. Benjamin Britton
Lascaux

Benjamin Britton is Assistant Professor of Electronic Art in the
School of Fine Arts at the University of Cincinnati, and is engaged in
creative research with Virtual Reality and other optical
media. Lascaux is an interactive 3D reconstruction of the celebrated
cave in France, to which access is now restricted for conservation
reasons. It aims to provide the viewer not only with a visual tour of
the cave and its magnificent prehistoric paintings, but also with some
sense of its underlying significance in the history of
humanity. Prof. Britton's Lascaux project has won wide acclaim as an
imaginative and stimulating example of interpretive archaeological
re-creation.


Prof. Thomas W. Maver
A Tale of Three Cities

Tom Maver is Professor of Computer Aided Design at the University of
Strathclyde, in Glasgow. He is also Director of ABACUS, the computer
research unit at the University's Department of Architecture and
Building Science, and an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Incorporation of
Architects in Scotland.

The ABACUS Group has been active for some years in the use of computer
graphics and multimedia to represent past, present and future
buildings in both urban and rural settings. The three cities discussed
during the presentation are Split, in former Yugoslavia - a graphical
account of the development of Split from its origin in the Diocletian
Palace of the Venetian Empire up to the present day; Edinburgh - a
multimedia interface to a large-scale three dimensional computer model
of Edinburgh Old Town; and Glasgow - Virtual City developments in the
run up to the City of Architecture and Design celebrations in
1999. The presentation concludes with a report on the IMAGEA project -
an international initiative to construct an Interactive Multimedia
Archive of Great European Architecture.


Dr George Forester; Rejean Baribeau
3-D Colour imaging of museum objects

The National Research Council of Canada (NRC), in collaboration with
the Canadian Conservation Institute (CCI), has developed a laser
imaging system for the rapid, three-dimensional digital recording of
museum objects. The system, believed to be the most advanced of its
kind in the world, enables highly accurate images of museum objects to
be examined in full colour and minute detail. Viewers can zoom in and
study intricate details such as tool marks on an archaeological find,
or the impasto effect of brush strokes on an important painting. The
scanned images can be made available worldwide via CD-ROM or
communications links, and will be invaluable in providing culturally
and historically accurate furnishings and details for virtual heritage
reconstructions. The presentation will be given by Dr George
Forester,Industrial Liaison Office, NRC, and Rejean Baribeau, a
conservation scientist at CCI, and a guest worker at NRC.


Bryan Mills
Hadrian's Wall, and Virtual Reality Valley

Bryan Mills is a member of the consultancy team developing the Northumbrian
Virtual Reality Project. He has been a leading figure in the information
technology field since the late 'fifties, originally with Burroughs, and
then as founder and for many years Chairman of CMG (Computer Management
Group), one of the largest multi-national computer software and services
groups in Europe. He was also founder President of the Computing Services
Association, Vice-Chairman of the Irish Computing Association, and
Vice-Chairman of the Industrial Participation Association. He will describe
the background, objectives and current status of the Northumbrian project,
one of the most ambitious of its kind in the world, which will include a
virtual reality reconstruction of Hadrian's Wall.


Dr Carl Eugene Loeffler
Virtual Pompeii

Dr Carl Loeffler is Research Director of SIMLAB, an advanced Virtual
Reality laboratory in the College of Fine Arts, at Carnegie Mellon
University. He is also Visiting Senior Scientist at the University of
Oslo, and Norwegian Telecom Research, and was responsible for
establishing the first Virtual Reality research laboratory in Norway,
Dr Loeffler enjoys an outstanding international reputation for the
creative application of VR to both artistic and professional projects.

Virtual Pompeii is an educational virtual reality application that
replicates the Theatre Complex, part of the ancient city of Pompeii as
it existed prior to the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in AD 79. The
re-enactment of a typical theatrical performance at the Large Theatre,
with virtual actors, is a special feature of the simulation. The
project is a collaboration between the Archaeological Institute of
America, Silicon Graphics, Inc, and the Carnegie Mellon SIMLAB.



Registration Options:
(note that the Value Added Tax (VAT) additions can be ignored in the case
of registrations from countries where VAT does not apply)

Standard Registration:
UKP295.00 plus VAT (=346.63), applicable after 31st October.

Early Registration:
UKP250.00 plus VAT (=293.75), applicable before 1st November

Academic/Charitable Registration:
UKP220.00 plus VAT (=258.50), applicable up to 15th November

Demand for places is expected to be high. Please register in good time.

Delegates should send full address and contact details with their payments to: 

VR NEWS
PO Box 2515
London N4 4JW, UK
Tel: +44 181-292-1498
Fax: +44 181-292-1346

Cheques should be made payable to VR NEWS. Credit card payments are
accepted (VISA, ACCESS and MASTERCARD only). An invoice (in UKP or US$)
will be issued on request, but bookings are only confirmed on receipt of
payment.

Bath offers a range of excellent hotel accommodation, typically from
UKP35.00 to 75.00 per person per night, including breakfast. Please
indicate whether you would like a room booking to be made for you, for
which night/s, whether single or double, and at what approximate price.


