When several Los Angeles neighborhoods started burning in January, Nonny de la Peña grieved over the devastation of her hometown, but she also knew it was a hands-on educational opportunity for aspiring journalists in the Narrative and Emerging Media program she leads at Arizona State University.
Even as the fire sites were smoldering, students and staff in the program hurried out to deploy cutting-edge technology that created astonishing before-and-after and 360-degree images of the destruction.
The team carried a rig with four cameras that captured different angles of one spot simultaneously and then used artificial intelligence to organize the images. This new “Gaussian Splat” technology creates high-quality, three-dimensional images faster and more efficiently.
The heartbreaking photos show lovely homes and the charred aftermath, scorched personal items like toys and kitchenware, and objects that remained strangely untouched by the flames.





































































