English

Identifying every building's function in large-scale urban areas with multi-modality remote-sensing data

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2024-05-09 v1 Image and Video Processing

Abstract

Buildings, as fundamental man-made structures in urban environments, serve as crucial indicators for understanding various city function zones. Rapid urbanization has raised an urgent need for efficiently surveying building footprints and functions. In this study, we proposed a semi-supervised framework to identify every building's function in large-scale urban areas with multi-modality remote-sensing data. In detail, optical images, building height, and nighttime-light data are collected to describe the morphological attributes of buildings. Then, the area of interest (AOI) and building masks from the volunteered geographic information (VGI) data are collected to form sparsely labeled samples. Furthermore, the multi-modality data and weak labels are utilized to train a segmentation model with a semi-supervised strategy. Finally, results are evaluated by 20,000 validation points and statistical survey reports from the government. The evaluations reveal that the produced function maps achieve an OA of 82% and Kappa of 71% among 1,616,796 buildings in Shanghai, China. This study has the potential to support large-scale urban management and sustainable urban development. All collected data and produced maps are open access at https://github.com/LiZhuoHong/BuildingMap.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2405.05133,
  title  = {Identifying every building's function in large-scale urban areas with multi-modality remote-sensing data},
  author = {Zhuohong Li and Wei He and Jiepan Li and Hongyan Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2405.05133},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

5 pages, 7 figures, accepted by IGARSS 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:20:53.576Z