1st Edition
Visualizing Venice Mapping and Modeling Time and Change in a City
Overview: The Visualizing Venice Enterprise
Part 1: Introductory Essays
1 The Role of Digital Visualization for the History of the City
2 Visualizing Venice: Teaching, Training, and Imagining a New Kind of Urban and Architectural History
3 Visualizing Venice: Developing a Methodology for Historical Visualization
Part 2: Historical Case Studies
4 Buildings that Never Were: The Unbuilt Projects for the Civic Hospital of Venice
5 Architectural and Urban Change Over Time: The School, Church, and Monastery of Santa Maria della Carità
6 Mapping Change and Motion in the Lagoon: The Island of San Secondo
7 Visualizing the Treves Botanical Garden in Padua: From Documentary Research to Laser Survey and 3D Modeling
8 Research on Lost Buildings in Venice: The Cathedral of San Pietro di Castello
Part 3: Tools, Technologies, and Training
9 Visualizing Venice: An Historical Overview of the Role and Application of Architectural and Urban Modeling
10 The History of Cities and HGIS
11 Digital Technologies and Exhibition Culture: Reactivating Art Installations through Virtual Reconstructions
12 Interactive Exhibitions: New Interfaces for Engaging Visualizations
13 Guidebooks and Mobile Applications: A New Mode of Communication
14 Digital Art History: Building a "Model" for Student Engagement
15 Visualizing Venice Summer Workshops for Graduate Students and Beginning Scholars
Visualizing Venice to Visualizing Cities: Future Horizons
Conclusion
Appendix
Biography
Kristin L. Huffman is an Instructor in the Department of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University.
Andrea Giordano is Professor at the University of Padua and coordinator of the Visualizing Venice’s 3D modeling team.
Caroline Bruzelius is the A.M. Cogan Professor of Art and Art History and a founder the Wired! Lab at Duke University and of Visualizing Venice.






