Brand New Beijing01/06/2008 |
| The XXI Congress of the International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS) is to be held in Beijing from 3rd to 11th July 2008. The quadrennial ISPRS Congress is one of the most important events in the photogrammetry, remote-sensing and spatial-information sciences community diary. The congress will be hosted by the Chinese Society of Geodesy, Photogrammetry and Cartography, with the theme ‘Silk Road for Information from Imagery’. To get an impression of how things are shaping up for this event and what participants may expect, we conducted an interview with congress director Chen Jun. |
| By Mathias Lemmens, editor-in-chief, GIM International |
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During the 2004 ISPRS Congress held in Istanbul, Beijing was elected as venue for the 2008 Congress. What were the decisive arguments for this choice? There are three major reasons why China applied to host the ISPRS 2008 Congress, and Beijing was finally elected as venue. First of all, China has achieved remarkable progress in ISPRS-related areas. Bringing ISPRS Congress to Beijing will provide an unprecedented opportunity for the international community to visit our institutes and industry, to observe new research and developments and to explore the co-operative potential and initiate new international collaborative agreements. Secondly, this is China’s second bid to host an ISPRS Congress. We have actively participated in each ISPRS Congress, sending large delegations ever since 1980, and have chaired three Technical Commissions. China has also hosted a number of ISPRS events, including three symposia and tens of ISPRS workshops. But China has never been offered an opportunity to host ISPRS Congress. We have been preparing for four years for this second bid, and China has shown its strong aspiration to contribute more and more to ISPRS. Thirdly, Beijing is the ideal city! Since 1992 the venue for congress has moved steadily eastwards, from Washington DC to Vienna, Amsterdam and Istanbul, and it is a natural and logical move on now to Beijing. In addition, Beijing is hosting the 2008 Olympic Games. Our congress participants will see a new Beijing, with ancient culture and modern charm.
What are your main aspirations for the 2008 ISPRS Congress and why, in your view, should geoinformatics professionals attend the congress and exhibition?
What will be the hot topics during the congress, and may we expect any exciting new developments from the industry?
ISPRS 2008 Beijing will take place just one month before the Olympic Games, when Beijing will become the focus of world attention. What is the possibility of interference between the ISPRS Congress and Olympics, as they will occur more or less simultaneously? Could the congress be negatively affected in terms of, for example, transportation restrictions and insufficient accommodation? If so, will alternatives be available?
Box: The Congress The programme will consist of keynote and plenary sessions featuring distinguished academics, and parallel oral and poster sessions presenting the latest developments over a broad range of topics. There will be a user’s forum showing successful solutions and new professional community demands, and a commercial exhibition demonstrating state-of-the-art equipment and services. The congress will be the culmination of four years’ work by many researchers, scientists, practitioners and administrators in fields covered by ISPRS. Besides the technical activities, a wide variety of social events will be arranged during congress, providing participants and their accompanying persons with the opportunity to experience the unique culture of China. A selection of pre- and post-congress tours will show participants Chinese historical relics and natural wonders, both in Beijing and other places in China. |
| Biography of Interviewee(s) Professor Chen Jun, born in 1956 in Huoqiu, Anhui Province, entered Wuhan Technical University of Surveying and Mapping (WTUSM) in December 1976, where he specialised in photogrammetry and remote sensing. In 1979 he began postgraduate studies, supervised by academician Wang Zhizhuo and Professor Yang Kai. From 1981 to 1982 Professor Chen Yun studied remote sensing technologies at the National Geographic Institute (IGN) of France and in 1983 became a faculty member of WTUSM. He was appointed a professor there in 1992. He held the post of executive director of the National Key Laboratory of Information Engineering on Surveying, Mapping and Remote Sensing (LIESMARS) from 1990 to 1995, and then joined the National Geomatics Center of China (NGCC) as its deputy president. He is now the president of NGCC. His involvement in ISPRS goes back over 25 years, to when he was still a student at IGN in France. |


