Digital Heritage & 3D Scanning Gathers Experts in Granada

Published on January 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Logo and view of the Digital Heritage & 3D Scanning event in a modern Granada auditorium, with screens displaying 3D models of archaeological sites and monuments.

Digital Heritage & 3D Scanning brings experts together in Granada

The city of Granada will host, from December 11 to 13, 2025, a key meeting point for professionals working with 3D technology applied to heritage. The Digital Heritage & 3D Scanning congress will bring together specialists to exchange knowledge on how to capture, process, and visualize cultural assets. 🏛️

Techniques for millimeter-precise documentation

The program focuses on exploring methods such as photogrammetry and laser scanning. These tools enable the generation of high-fidelity three-dimensional digital records of any heritage element. Attendees will see practical cases where this data is used to analyze, restore, or conserve monuments and artifacts in innovative ways.

Key applications to be presented:
  • Projects that reconstruct complete archaeological sites from point clouds.
  • Workflows for processing scanning data and creating models useful for research.
  • Methodologies that use 3D models as a basis for planning restoration interventions.
Transforming technical data into accessible experiences is one of the congress's main objectives.

From technical data to immersive experiences

A fundamental pillar of the event is disseminating heritage. It will demonstrate how 3D models enable the creation of virtual reconstructions of historical sites and interactive museum exhibitions. This makes it easier for the general public to explore spaces that are physically inaccessible due to distance or fragility.

Examples of visualization for the public:
  • Virtual tours of sites that allow "walking" among ruins from any device.
  • Digital museums where artifacts can be manipulated and observed with extreme detail.
  • Experiences that bring users close to details like the cracks in a Roman mosaic, visible in ultra-high resolution.

A forum for the future of digital conservation

This congress in Granada positions itself as an essential scenario for defining the future of how we preserve cultural memory. The combination of technical precision and dissemination capacity marks a path where 3D technology not only archives but also revitalizes and shares historical legacy with everyone. 💻