Abstract:Feed-forward 3D reconstruction models have recently shown strong generalization across diverse scenes, yet most of them recover geometry only up to an unknown global scale. This scale ambiguity limits their use in applications that require metric understanding of the environment. Existing metric reconstruction methods commonly rely on large-scale metric annotations or accurate camera calibration, both of which are costly or unreliable in many real-world settings. We propose a satellite-guided framework for resolving scale ambiguity in feed-forward 3D reconstruction. The key idea is to use readily available satellite imagery as a global metric reference. Given a coarse camera pose, our method retrieves a local satellite patch and integrates it with a feed-forward reconstruction backbone through bidirectional cross-view interaction. By enforcing consistency between the reconstructed scene and the satellite reference, the model infers absolute scale, refines scene geometry, and estimates camera pose in a metric coordinate frame. Experiments on KITTI, nuScenes, and Oxford RobotCar show consistent improvements in metric depth estimation, multi-view point-cloud reconstruction, and cross-view camera localization, while preserving strong generalization across datasets and geographic regions.
Abstract:We introduce CADSpotting, an efficient method for panoptic symbol spotting in large-scale architectural CAD drawings. Existing approaches struggle with the diversity of symbols, scale variations, and overlapping elements in CAD designs. CADSpotting overcomes these challenges by representing each primitive with dense points instead of a single primitive point, described by essential attributes like coordinates and color. Building upon a unified 3D point cloud model for joint semantic, instance, and panoptic segmentation, CADSpotting learns robust feature representations. To enable accurate segmentation in large, complex drawings, we further propose a novel Sliding Window Aggregation (SWA) technique, combining weighted voting and Non-Maximum Suppression (NMS). Moreover, we introduce a large-scale CAD dataset named LS-CAD to support our experiments. Each floorplan in LS-CAD has an average coverage of 1,000 square meter(versus 100 square meter in the existing dataset), providing a valuable benchmark for symbol spotting research. Experimental results on FloorPlanCAD and LS-CAD datasets demonstrate that CADSpotting outperforms existing methods, showcasing its robustness and scalability for real-world CAD applications.