Stanford Photogrammetry
AeroFrohne delivers RTK photogrammetry in Stanford, Kentucky by capturing aerial imagery and producing measurable mapping deliverables like 2D orthophotos, contours, and 3D models. Stanford is the Lincoln County seat with a historic Main Street, US 27 and US 150 access, nearby farmland, schools, and local commercial redevelopment opportunities. 2D orthophotos give planners and engineers a current map for lot layouts, streetscape work, drainage review, pavement measurement, and rural-to-urban edge development.
Orthomosaics & GIS ready exports georeferenced outputs for planning, documentation, and reporting.
Surfaces, contours & volumes DSM/DTM, contour lines, and stockpile/earthwork measurements.
Measurable 3D models deliverables suitable for CAD/GIS workflows and stakeholder communication.
Photogrammetry Gallery
A curated set of RTK Photogrammetry captures
Common Questions
What do you need to start an RTK photogrammetry project?
A site address and boundary (KML/KMZ preferred or GeoJSON if available), target deliverables (2D orthophoto, contours, volumetrics, 3D model), plus any accuracy/control requirements. For Stanford sites, share access windows, terrain concerns, and review deadlines so we can align on the flight plan and QA approach.
How do 2D mapping orthophotos help land development?
2D orthophotos give planners and engineers a current map for lot layouts, streetscape work, drainage review, pavement measurement, and rural-to-urban edge development. Because the imagery is orthorectified and georeferenced, it can support CAD/GIS overlays, drainage review, progress documentation, and stakeholder communication.
What deliverables can I request?
Orthomosaics, DSM/DTM surfaces, TIF, GLB, custom CRS, quality reports, contour lines, stockpile/earthwork volumes, and measurable 3D models suitable for CAD/GIS workflows.
Who uses RTK photogrammetry?
Stanford AEC teams, industrial operators, developers, survey support teams, landowners, and public entities use photogrammetry for documentation, planning, progress tracking, and surveying or engineering grade measurements depending on the scope of work.
How fast is turnaround?
Turnaround depends on site size and deliverable complexity. Stanford area projects can be prioritized for time-sensitive mapping once scope, access, and QA requirements are confirmed.