Golf Club Atlas
GolfClubAtlas.com => Golf Course Architecture Discussion Group => Topic started by: John Connolly on February 14, 2017, 12:29:39 PM
-
I have a wonderful 3D topo map of Montana. Richly contoured on sturdy paper, I enjoy the aesthetics of it immensely. Plastic 3D printing is less interesting to me than that done the old fashioned way with paper. Have any of you had one created of a golf course? Is there a company around that does it?
-
I have a wonderful 3D topo map of Montana. Richly contoured on sturdy paper, I enjoy the aesthetics of it immensely. Plastic 3D printing is less interesting to me than that done the old fashioned way with paper. Have any of you had one created of a golf course? Is there a company around that does it?
Any chance you could share - I know there's been demand for another armchair architecture contest ;D
-
I am working on a trial to be able to map golf courses and produce a topo with VIs of two inches, using drones. Each course would take 8 hours to map. Not sure of costs yet. I would like to get a 2 inch map of The Old Course.
-
I've build a couple and hope to make many many more. They are a lot of fun to design, fabricate, and just stare at the ebb and flow of the land. I've found that the best look is achieved with around 20 layers, which makes the source resolution critical for for flatter courses. I can't find any pictures of the one I made from cut paper but here are a couple of pictures of a recognizable course I built out of 1mm painted plywood:
(https://tinyurl.com/jp9pcch)
(https://tinyurl.com/h3w32yt)
-
John, are you speaking of the topo maps that require stereoscopic viewers that you look staight down on the map and get the 3-d full effect? We used to have many of them on range and township maps of sections of Wisconsin, used at Geography labs at UW. They are very cool
-
Cool stuff Ben!
-
Nice work Ben.
Adrian,
it will be interesting to see how your project pans out.
Jon
-
John, are you speaking of the topo maps that require stereoscopic viewers that you look staight down on the map and get the 3-d full effect? We used to have many of them on range and township maps of sections of Wisconsin, used at Geography labs at UW. They are very cool
RJ,
No, I've attached a link to a pic of the map I'm referring to. The company that manufactures the map is (was) called Hubbard Scientific Inc. They may be NLE.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/vm4hjat3ylt4xh3/IMG_2831.jpg?dl=0
-
John,
Your map looks very like the plastic vacuum formed ones we had in school:
http://relief-maps.co.uk/
You sure yours is paper?
F.
-
Here's a polystyrene green site model I made during my MSc. It's been covered in the coloured sawdust that railway modellers use.
(http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y240/Fatbaldydrummer/GreenModel3.jpg)
Very low-tech these days!
F.
-
https://www.amep.com/index.php?route=product/category&path=174
says Hubbard Scientific maps are vacuum formed vinyl.
-
To see this same course on my living room floor, I went the virtual route:
(http://i.imgur.com/qTPoUOn.jpg?2)
Nearly the same view as Ben's second image!
-
Cool samples gents, thank you. Hubbard Scientific appears to offer these only of select regions in the U.S. - namely mountainous areas. Too bad - I'd love to send in some coordinates of my home course and have it made. It wouldn't be nearly as dramatic given its relatively flat terrain but I'd still find it informative. As would our Super and architect, I suspect.