The Austrian architect Joseph Maria Olbrich was an important representative of Art Nouveau and founder of Darmstadt’s artists’ colony. His residence on Mathildenhöhe is an art-historical center of attraction of which only a simplification was rebuilt after the war. Many of its original features can only be guessed at on historic materials. In lieu of long internet research, this knowledge will soon appear on the iPhone.
Whenever natural reality is overlaid with additional information, we talk about Augmented Reality (AR). The technology was developed by researchers of Fraunhofer IGD, the world’s leading research institute for applied Visual Computing, and will identify position and view of photos taken on site and select the matching historic material in real time. “The application dARsein processes natural image features and thus recognizes three-dimensional objects, such as buildings”, explains Dr. Ulrich Bockholt, head of the “Virtual and Augmented Reality” competence center at Fraunhofer IGD. “Images, texts and graphics can hence be laid over a photo taken by the cell phone in the right position.”
dARsein allows visitors to Mathildenhöhe to view the original design drafts and blueprints or historic images as an overlay on today’s building. Past and present become comparable. “Darmstadt Marketing aims to try the new technology in cultural tourism”, says general manager Anja Herdel. “If there is enough interest, we plan to cover more of Darmstadt’s sights via dARsein.”
A tour of Darmstadt with the smartphone might soon become a journey through time. Interesting historic sites are simply photographed, and the visitor will instantly experience the city’s history. A taste of dARsein will be available for free at the App Store from Friday (3 June).
NOTE: There is also raw HD video material for TV stations and online media on the subject. The use is free for editorial purposes.