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How to import ASC points into boundary

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Message 1 of 13
Liesl_H
735 Views, 12 Replies

How to import ASC points into boundary

Hello,

 

I have a very large set of elevation data (for the entire city of Calgary) in ASC format and my computer crashes when I try to import all of it. I have tried creating a boundary but CAD wants the surface FIRST, which kind of defeats the purpose. Is there a way to predetermine the area you want to import into?

 

AutoCAD Civil 3D 2020

 

Thanks in advance,

Liesl

 

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12 REPLIES 12
Message 2 of 13
v-silvestre
in reply to: Liesl_H

Hi @Liesl_H, you could try creating a surface, then adding a boundary definition before importing the ASC file.  I haven't tried it myself, but I'm wondering if it might help.  Any chance you could post the ASC file?

Message 3 of 13
rl_jackson
in reply to: Liesl_H

Try adding the point file to the surface instead of adding the points to the drawing.

Rick Jackson
Survey CAD Technician VI

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Message 4 of 13
ChicagoLooper
in reply to: Liesl_H

Hi @Liesl_H

Wow! Entire city. That's huge, I mean huuuuuge. 😊

 

How big is your ASC file?

Over 1 gig? Over 2 gig? 3? 4?

 

Just curious. 

 

Chicagolooper

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Message 5 of 13
TerryDotson
in reply to: Liesl_H

Here is something definitely worth trying.

 

  1. Use TXT2LAS in LASTOOLS from the late great Martin Isenburg to create a .LAZ (Lidar) file.
  2. Use the DotSoft LidarTools Freeware on Autodesk App Store, you will be able to pick a rectangular area to limit the points and create a Civil3D TinSurface.
Message 6 of 13
rl_jackson
in reply to: Liesl_H

@ChicagoLooper ,

 

Guess I should have read the parathesis 😄 Wow @Liesl_H that is a lot of data. You'll need to clip that as anything about a G or so becomes unusable IMO, less is better.


Rick Jackson
Survey CAD Technician VI

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Message 7 of 13
Pointdump
in reply to: Liesl_H

Hi Liesl,
I like Terry's @TerryDotson idea of using TXT2LAS and then his LidarTools.
You can add a Data Clip Boundary to your Surface Definition before adding the ASC points.
You can also crop the points to your Area of Interest beforehand in QGIS or CloudCompare.
Dave

Dave Stoll
Las Vegas, Nevada

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Message 8 of 13
Pointdump
in reply to: Liesl_H

Wow, 4.2GB! That's insane. >>>Link<<<. Why didn't they break that up into tiles? Even QGIS chokes on that much data. It took almost 5 minutes to bring it in.

Dave

 

Calgary_1.png

 

Dave Stoll
Las Vegas, Nevada

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64GB DDR4 2400MHz ECC SoDIMM / 1TB SSD
NVIDIA Quadro P5000 16GB
Windows 10 Pro 64 / Civil 3D 2024
Message 9 of 13
Pointdump
in reply to: Liesl_H

306,687,994 Points! I can't get TXT2LAS to recognize the ESRI ASC file format. CloudCompare can read it and re-save to LAS format. LAS2LAS takes the 5.9GB LAS file and re-saves to a 410MB LAZ file. WeTransfer link >>>Here<<<.
Dave

Dave Stoll
Las Vegas, Nevada

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64GB DDR4 2400MHz ECC SoDIMM / 1TB SSD
NVIDIA Quadro P5000 16GB
Windows 10 Pro 64 / Civil 3D 2024
Message 10 of 13
Pointdump
in reply to: Liesl_H

Liesl,
Any way you look at it you'll need 3rd party software. When I run the 410MB LAZ file through ReCap I get a 6+GB file that chokes Civil 3D. So the 2 best options are Terry's LidarTools or cropping the LAZ file in CloudCompare with a shapefile of your Area of Interest.
Dave

Dave Stoll
Las Vegas, Nevada

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64GB DDR4 2400MHz ECC SoDIMM / 1TB SSD
NVIDIA Quadro P5000 16GB
Windows 10 Pro 64 / Civil 3D 2024
Message 11 of 13
ChicagoLooper
in reply to: Liesl_H

FYI,

ASC format is a grid—not points—like tif or DEM. It’s a raster and you could, IF the file size was manageable, add it to modelspace using an FDO connection. 

 

 

Chicagolooper

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Message 12 of 13
ChicagoLooper
in reply to: Liesl_H

Hi @Liesl_H 

 

Image-1: Here's the Calgary asc in another program, Global Mapper. The downloaded acs is 4.18 GBs. It took about 60 seconds to add two files: the acs and the topo map. To crop, I drew a tiny red rectangle in the middle and used it as the cropping edge. It demarcates the 'area' I want to keep. 

Image-1Image-1

 

Image-2: Back in AutoCAD, I add the newly cropped asc to modelspace (FDO connection) and it looks like this. At this point I could delete the asc from the drawing since I no longer need it. Instead of deleting though, I un-check the asc from the Map Task Pane. 

Image-2Image-2

 

Image-3: I can create a surface using the same cropped asc as the surface definition.

Image-3Image-3

 

Image-4: Here's the surface with the contours turned OFF. It's using a surface style that displays just the triangles. You can clearly see a square pattern with diagonals running through each square. This is because ASC format is a grid consisting of pixels and you could say each pixel color represents elevation. The surface isn't generated by 'elevated points' where the elevation is based on the point's z-value. If it was you'd see triangulation, not squares & diagonals.

 

<<The big white roof left of center is the IKEA Store. The Bow River is on the right.>>

Image-4Image-4

 

Image-5: Here's the same surface with the triangles turned OFF and the contours turned ON.

Image-5Image-5

Image-6: Here's the same asc but with a larger cropped area compared to the one shown in image-2. It extends farther in all directions, i.e. north, south, east and west. This cropped asc is 67,998 MB.

Image-6Image-6

 

Image-7: This is the same cropped asc as image-2. It's only 2,633 MB. For comparison, and as stated in image-1, the original downloaded asc is a whopping 4.18 GBs. 

Image-7Image-7

 

Too bad AutoCAD chokes. It just can't handle large files easily. If it could we wouldn't get calluses pressing CNTL+ATL+DEL and all of us would be happier.

 

Chicagolooper

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Message 13 of 13
Liesl_H
in reply to: ChicagoLooper

This is exactly what I needed. Thank you to you and everyone who responded to this question. I could not do my work without this group of people!!

 

"If it could we wouldn't get calluses pressing CNTL+ATL+DEL and all of us would be happier."   Indeed!

 

 

Liesl

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