Benli, Gülhan2024-10-122024-10-122015978-146668380-8; 1466683791; 978-146668379-2https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8379-2.ch013https://hdl.handle.net/11467/8855Since the 2000s, terrestrial laser scanning, as one of the methods used to document historical edifices in protected areas, has taken on greater importance because it mitigates the difficulties associated with working on large areas and saves time while also making it possible to better understand all the particularities of the area. Through this technology, comprehensive point data (point clouds) about the surface of an object can be generated in a highly accurate three-dimensional manner. Furthermore, with the proper software this three-dimensional point cloud data can be transformed into three-dimensional rendering/mapping/modeling and quantitative orthophotographs. In this chapter, the study will present the results of terrestrial laser scanning and surveying which was used to obtain three-dimensional point clouds through three-dimensional survey measurements and scans of silhouettes of streets in Fatih in Historic Peninsula in Istanbul, which were then transposed into survey images and drawings. The study will also cite examples of the facade mapping using terrestrial laser scanning data in Istanbul Historic Peninsula Project. © 2015, IGI Global. All rights reserved.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessConservationScanningSteel beams and girdersSurface analysisSurveyingSurveysHighly accurateLaser scannerOrthophotographsPoint cloudProtected areasSurvey measurementTerrestrial laser scanningThree-dimensional point cloudsLaser applicationsThe advantages of using laser scanners in surveying in protected sites: A case study in historical Peninsula in IstanbulBook Chapter382402N/A2-s2.0-8495709842010.4018/978-1-4666-8379-2.ch013