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OGC, SIG 3D, and TUM announce workshop to gather CityGML requirements

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WorkshopThe OGC CityGML SWG, the SIG 3D, and Technische Universität München will host a joint international workshop to gather requirements to guide the development of the next major version of CityGML (3.0). The workshop will take place on the 20th and 21st of June, 2013 in Munich, Germany. The organizations seek input from CityGML users, data producers, software manufacturers, and scientists working with or on CityGML. Participation in the event is free of charge including coffee breaks and light lunch meals. Travel, accommodation, and the social evening event are at the expense of the participants.

Date & Time:
• Workshop: 10:00-17:00 (CEST) 20 June and 09:00-15:00 21 June, 2013.
• Evening Event: 18:00-22:00 20 June, 2013.
• Short OGC CityGML 3.0 Standards Working Group meeting: 15:00-17:00 Friday 21 June

Location:
• Workshop:  Technische Universität München, Vorhoelzer Forum,  Arcisstr. 21, 80333 Munich, Germany
• Evening Event: Will be announced on the Workshop Wiki
• OGC CityGML Standards Working Group (SWG) Meeting: To be announced

See more details at http://www.opengeospatial.org/node/1812 and in the Workshop Wiki visit here.

Register for the SIG 3D – OGC – TUM International Workshop on Requirements for CityGML 3.0.

The workshop is sponsored by the companies M.O.S.S. Computer Graphik Systeme GmbH, virtualcitySYSTEMS GmbH, and Technische Universität München.

SIG 3D members developed the first version of CityGML and in 2005 submitted CityGML as a candidate standard into the OGC standards process. CityGML is a comprehensive open data model framework and XML-based encoding standard for the modeling, storage, and exchange of virtual 3D city and landscape models. Since 2008 it is an OGC standard. CityGML is implemented as an application schema of the OGC Geography Markup Language 3 (GML3) Encoding Standard, an international standard for spatial data exchange and encoding approved by the OGC and ISO. CityGML 2.0 has been adopted as part of the European Union’s common spatial data infrastructure, INSPIRE, and it is being implemented across Europe, Canada, the Middle East and Asia.

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