Qubbet el-Hawa (Aswan)

The Qubbet el-Hawa project uses the Sketchfab platform to share a selection of objects and environments scanned and digitized since 2014. This way, we can share material with the public that is often still unpublished. The 3D models are annotated and can be viewed in Virtual Reality using suitable mobile devices.

Explore

3D Model of Deir el-Medina

Video by the IFAO about their efforts to make a 3D photogrammetry model of the village of Deir el-Medina and the nearby Ptolemaic temple.

Watch on Youtube

Facsimile of the tomb of Tutankhamen

In the years since its discovery, the tomb of the young pharaoh Tutankhamun emerged from obscurity to capture the public imagination. About 1,000 visitors enter the fragile sacred space each day, leaving behind bacteria and a thick layer of dust that is wiped off the sheet of glass covering the sarcophagus every morning.

The TNPI recorded the tomb of Tutankhamun and made public its data for scholars and conservators to monitor its conservation condition. The data was re-materialised as a facsimile to create awareness about the importance of non-contact conservation and sustainable tourism.

Explore

The Tomb of Nefertari

3D & VR of the tomb of Nefertari by Andrey Plaksin based on 4500 photos, with an overall volume of 15.3 GB in different resolutions, including rare archival images. Non-commercial, creative and educational project.

Explore

Giza 3D

3D reconstruction of the Giza Plateau by the Giza Project at Harvard University. Contains models of several pyramids and mastabas as well as some virtual tours.

Explore

Constructing the Sacred: Visibility and Ritual Landscape at the Egyptian Necropolis of Saqqara
Elaine A. Sullivan

The long-lived burial site of Saqqara, Egypt, has been studied for more than a century. But the site we visit today is a palimpsest, the result of thousands of years of change, both architectural and environmental. Elaine A. Sullivan uses 3D technologies to peel away the layers of history at the site, revealing how changes to sight lines, skylines, and vistas at different periods of Saqqara’s millennia-long use influenced sacred ceremonies and ritual meaning at the necropolis.

Explore

Amarna 3D

Personal research project into computer animation by Paul Docherty. The aim was to construct a virtual recreation of the main city complex of the ancient Egyptian city of Akhetaten, for use within a documentary style animation. The model was developed spanning different versions.

Explore

Digital Karnak

The colossal site of Karnak is one of the largest temple complexes in the world, with an incredibly rich architectural, ritual, religious, economic, social and political history. The Amun-Ra precinct, which includes an astonishing number of individual temples, shrines and processional ways, stands as a micro-cosmos of ancient Egypt.

The Digital Karnak Project was designed and built at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) under the direction of Dr. Diane Favro (director of the ETC) and Dr. Willeke Wendrich (editor-in-chief of the UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology).

Explore

Virtual Hibeh

Personal project by Kristian Howald, a computer graphics artist graduated from Sheridan College’s Classical and Computer Animation program.

Explore

Bathing with the Romans (Karanis)

3D reconstruction as part of the URU Fayum Project carried out by ARCHiNOS Architecture with funding from the U.S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation.

Explore

Piramesse

Qantir/Pi-Ramesse (House of Ramses) is situated in the Nile-Delta of Egypt, about 120 km northeast of Cairo. Between the 17th of December 2016 and the 18th of June of 2017 an exhibition titled “Ramesses – Divine ruler of the Nile” took place in Karlsruhe, Germany, in which an animation of the reconstruction of Pi-Ramesse was presented.

Explore

Virtual Malqata

In 2016, Franck Monnier with the aid of Paul François took on the digital reconstruction of the palace of Malqata. They used state-of-the-art digital reconstruction technologies and 3-D software to create a platform to test various viewpoints of the site and to validate architectural and decoration presumptions. The resulting digital imagery also enabled researchers to produce different renderings, such as day and night views. While this virtual animation brings the site back to life, this computing power must not downplay the importance of the fundamentals of archaeological reconstruction. Documentary research and the cross-referencing of archeological data remain the foundation of such an undertaking.

Explore

Amarna (Aton-Num exhibition)

3D reconstruction by the company Archéovision for an exhibition in France about  the Amarna period.

Explore

Wadi el-Hudi

The Wadi el-Hudi Expedition is developing an immersive 3D model of the 46+ archaeological sites found in this region of the Eastern Desert. This makes use of the ground-based photogrammetric data gathered in previous seasons along with satellite-based photographs and digital elevation models to make a seamless walk-through of the archaeological areas of Wadi el-Hudi.

Explore

Sai Island

Screenshot from the interactive reconstruction towards the southern enclosure at Sai City, with the mayor’s imposing house on the left and the rear of a block of houses on the right. The user has engaged with a hotspot on the wall to reveal its brick construction and to expose and separate the individual elements of the roof’s and doors’ construction. The virtual reconstruction suggests that, with an open courtyard and internal windows, no external windows would have been necessary in these smaller houses. Image: Carl G. Elkins.

Read the article