FME Provides Access to Full 3D Cityscapes within ESRI ArcGIS



Safe Software has achieved this by adding support in FME for 3D data textures and additional 3D formats including Autodesk® 3ds, Autodesk Civil 3D®, Google™ Sketchup™ and Collada. Safe has also enhanced FME to be capable of creating Geodatabases with attributes and textures on 3D objects, and has designed FME to extend the browsing capabilities of ArcCatalog®, enabling users to view textured 3D objects without having to import data.

ESRI users can now leverage 3D data from a wide variety of sources – whether the data has been custom-designed in 3D authoring environments, purchased from data providers or collected free from 3D warehouses – and then import or view the 3D data directly in ArcGIS for use in enriched visualizations and analysis.

"We can now meet the pressure to share our 3D city with everyone," says Eddie Larsson, GIS Manager at the City of Gävle, Sweden. "By using FME, we can now keep our full cityscape in our ESRI environment and share it out in the formats people ask for, such as KML. Safe Software has helped us put a very realistic Gävle on the map - our famous Yule Goat and all."

Designed in partnership with ESRI, who has announced their plan to add 3D editing and routing tools to the ArcGIS 9.4 release, this development culminates two years of collaboration to deliver improved 3D interoperability to ESRI users.

"We are very excited to see the vision we had over two years ago coming through to reality," says Dale Lutz, Vice President of Development at Safe Software. "This newest development is a giant step forward in enabling the GIS market to work with the 3D data they want to access to enhance their business intelligence."

Organizations interested in seeing how FME enables quick direct-view and importing capabilities for 3D data in ESRI ArcGIS can access the FME 2010 beta at www.safe.com/Beta or visit www.safe.com/Gavle to learn more.

About Safe Software and FME
Safe Software powers the flow of spatial data with its software platform, FME. The recognized standard in spatial ETL (extract, transform and load), FME is the only complete solution for data conversion. It delivers the most extensive format support for data translation and integration, and provides unlimited flexibility in data model transformation and distribution.

FME is used by thousands of customers worldwide in a variety of industries including government, utilities, and petroleum. Its powerful data access technology also makes FME the choice of leading GIS, CAD, and database vendors for integration into their own solutions. Designed for true data interoperability, FME unleashes spatial data so people can use it where, when, and how they want to. For more information, visit www.safe.com.

Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:

Perspectives

What do sensors add to a decision support system?

Written byMatt Ball
on May 22, 2012

An often-quoted Business Week article from 1999 stated that, “In the next century, planet Earth will don an electric skin…”...

Is it time for focused publications that aim to make sense of change at both the global and local scales?

Written byMatt Ball
on May 15, 2012

Change is a constant that is inevitable, but what isn't inevitable are disruptive impacts. The more we know about our...

GeoEye Proposes to Purchase DigitalGlobe

Written byMatt Ball
on May 04, 2012

The mergers and acquisitions within the geospatial technology space are white hot right now, with news Friday that GeoEye approached...

Why did Trimble buy SketchUp, and why did Google sell?

Written byMatt Ball
on April 29, 2012

It’s funny, my first reaction to the Trimble buys SketchUp news was that it was some kind of spoof, and...

If Enhanced View cuts come, why not remove resolution restrictions?

Written byMatt Ball
on April 22, 2012

A feature in the New York Times outlines the battle that is brewing in Congress to defend the use of...

Tag Cloud

Current Readers