Building extraction from remote sensing imagery plays a pivotal role in applications such as smart cities, urban planning, and disaster assessment. Although deep learning has significantly advanced this task, existing methods still struggle to strike an effective balance among global semantic understanding, local detail recovery, and multi-scale contextual awareness—particularly when confronted with challenges including extreme scale variations, complex spatial distributions, occlusions, and ambiguous boundaries. To address these issues, we propose TriadFlow-Net, an efficient end-to-end network architecture. First, we introduce the Multi-scale Attention Feature Enhancement Module (MAFEM), which employs parallel attention branches with varying neighborhood radii to adaptively capture multi-scale contextual information, thereby alleviating the problem of imbalanced receptive field coverage. Second, to enhance robustness under severe occlusion scenarios, we innovatively integrate a Non-Causal State Space Model (NC-SSD) with a Densely Connected Dynamic Fusion (DCDF) mechanism, enabling linear-complexity modeling of global long-range dependencies. Finally, we incorporate a Multi-scale High-Frequency Detail Extractor (MHFE) along with a channel–spatial attention mechanism to precisely refine boundary details while suppressing noise. Extensive experiments conducted on three publicly available building segmentation benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed TriadFlow-Net achieves state-of-the-art performance across multiple evaluation metrics, while maintaining computational efficiency—offering a novel and effective solution for high-resolution remote sensing building extraction.
Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.