Read More - Riverview Systems Group, Inc.
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Read More - Riverview Systems Group, Inc.
SPECIAL REPORT Copyright Lighting&Sound America August 2011 http://www.lightingandsoundamerica.com/LSA.html The 2011 InfoComm/LSA Staged Events Awards By: Benjamin Le Hay Who were this year’s winners? The 2011 InfoComm/LSA Staged Events Awards ceremony, hosted by Lighting&Sound America magazine and InfoComm International, took place June 15 at the 2011 InfoComm Show in Orlando. The awards, honoring outstanding and innovative staged events from 2010, were presented to the winners by LSA’s editor-in-chief, David Barbour, at the conclusion of 12th annual Rental & Staging Forum (which was sponsored by Renkus-Heinz and LSA). The forum featured a panel discussion, moderated by Tom Stimson, president of The Stimson Group. After honorees had collected their crystals, guests enjoyed a cocktail reception co-sponsored by LSA and InfoComm International. And the winners are: Best Overall Staging for a Corporate or Association Event — Technology Budget $50,000 — $199,999 AVW-Telav won for its work on the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Cocktail Gala, at le Palais des congrès de Montréal. Idées au cube served as the event producer and Opus 3 was the management/planning company. The exclusive VIP cocktail gala The IOSCO Cocktail Gala. 52 • August 2011 • Lighting&Sound America brought together top financial heads from around the globe to mingle and network. IOSCO’s objective was to dazzle the major players in attendance by creating a unique, immersive environment as well as a memorable “Canadian” experience. AVW-Telav determined that the theme would be Canada’s four seasons—winter, summer, fall, and spring— creating a multisensory experience in which delegates could visualize, hear, smell, and touch the various elements (including seasonal attributes like snow, fog, mist/rain, flowers, foliage, wind etc.). AVW-Telav relied on a Dataton WATCHOUT 4 multimedia system to control all elements through a 16-channel DMX control board. AVW-Telav also implemented three Christie HD10K projectors with 1.4-1.8:1 lens and a Peroni screen. Audio was achieved with Renkus-Heinz boxes, augmented by Meyer UPM-1Ps and EAW stage monitors, all controlled by a DiGiCo D1 56-channel digital audio console. The lighting package included: ETC Source Fours, SGM Palco 3s, Martin Professional MAC 250 Entours and 700 Profiles, Philips Color Kinetics ColorBlasts, Philips Vari*Lite VLX automated LED units, a grandMA lighting console, and a Jands Vista S3 console. MDG smoke machines and an MDG Atmosphere fogger delivered special effects. One judge remarked, “Invoking creative solutions to engage all the senses within an honest budget, AVW voy- The 2010 Transitions Optical Convention. ages through the seasons charting scents, lighting, sounds, mist, snow, video, and even leaves to capture the distinctly Canadian weather experience.” Honorable mention went to Scharff Weisberg for the Oracle 11g Product Launch at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City. Producer InVision Communications, WorldStage, Inc. and Video Applications Inc. (VAI), and Scharff Weisberg all teamed together to promote Oracle’s Enterprise Manager 11g IT management program. The centerpiece was the museum’s rotunda, where Scharff Weisberg created 3D image mapping that the content followed. Four Christie S+20K projectors delivered quadrant-overlapped images, each spanning 25' x 34' for a total image size of 46' x 62'. A coolux Pandora’s Box dual-output image processor/server was chosen as the content delivery and projection-alignment tool. Images portraying Oracle brand-specific content were displayed on four parapet levels and conformed to the curvature of the parapet walls. Other equipment utilized on the project included an assortment of Panasonic monitors, switchers, and recorders; Barco Folsom Image Pro HD scalers; a AJA ProRes digital recorder; Sony PVM-9L3 SDI monitor packages; two Gefen DVI 1x2 dual link DA packages; and Samsung displays. The principal audio gear incorporated a Yamaha M7CL audio mixer, Meyer loudspeakers, and Sennheiser and Shure mics. Lighting came from Philips Color Kinetics ColorBlasts and ETC Source Fours, with control by grandMA full-size consoles. One judge marveled, “This was an inspiring use of technology and project management finesse in a challenging environment. The Guggenheim should consider adding permanent projection to the walkways!” Best Overall Staging for a Corporate or Association Event — Technology Budget over $200,000 PSAV took the award in this category for the 2010 Transitions Optical Convention, produced by the Disney Event Group. For the event, the PSAV/DEG team conceptualized filling a 84,000-sq.-ft. ballroom at Disney’s Yacht and Beach Resort in Orlando, Florida with a “blank canvas” or immersive video screen that supported the meeting message, “Never Lose Sight of the Possibilities.” The collaborative effort resulted in the production of a wide-area video, or WAV, which was longer than a football field, and what was billed as the world’s largest single blended video display system. The project was met with numerous challenges, most notably adapting the space to the AV, costs, a 24-hour setup time frame (for an estimated 40 hours of setup work), and lastly, turning the 84,000-sq.-ft. ballroom into four breakout rooms (each with 70' x 17' screens), with a 315' screen spanning the venue. In the end, DEG produced a nine-minute, full animation story and highly immersive theatrical experience, leaving delegates the sensation that they were swimming under the sea, traveling over the landscape, and soaring above the clouds. Barco gear composed most of the AV equipment. A Yamaha M7CL mixer, a full EAW package, Shure microphones, and a 24-channel Midas mixer rounded out the audio list. Lighting gear mostly came from Martin Professional (MAC 2000s and Mac 550s). “PSAV’s design and execution of this event was aweinspiring and nearly flawless,” commented a judge. “Creatively, the design, content, and overall feeling of being wrapped in the message were amazing. However, the most impressive aspect to this event was the 24-hour time frame www.lightingandsoundamerica.com • August 2011 • 53 SPECIAL REPORT Another view of the Transitions Optical Convention. for set-up. The PSAV team did an amazing job in a short amount of time. This brings ‘hotel AV’ to a whole new level!” Alford Media was awarded an honorable mention for the Boy Scouts of America 100th-anniversary National Scout Jamboree, which it carried out for Corporate Magic, Inc. Staged in an empty field at the Fort AP Hill army base, in Virginia, miles away from accommodations, the event was a massive undertaking that needed to make a bold statement about the organization’s achievements, ideologies, and progress into the future. Challenges consisted of strict guidelines from military security, dealing with oppressive heat and rain, and having to work with inexperienced scouts on difficult installations. Six HD cameras were used to capture activity on the stage and throughout the audience, which was simulcast to hundreds of Boy Scout facilities nationwide and via the internet. Video gear included Grass Valley LDK 8000 cameras. Two hundred and four lighting units and 54 LED strip lights provided illumination. Seven towers stretched for 395' across the stage, and the various structures were composed of 17,296 parts. Twenty miles of cable tied everything together. The arena spread out over 13 acres. One judge said, “With exceptional volunteer management and political aptitude, Alford Media overcame prodigious obstacles and orchestrated an AV masterpiece honoring the Boy Scouts’ colossal 100 year anniversary.” 54 • August 2011 • Lighting&Sound America Best Overall Staging for a Corporate Industrial Entertainment Event Scharff Weisberg won for the Robin Hood Foundation Gala, which took place in New York City. The event raised nearly $88 million towards programming for underprivileged New Yorkers. For the 2010 gala, Robin Hood charged Scharff Weisberg with designing and implementing projection elements for the cocktail area in a way that “brought home the foundation’s impact on real neighborhoods.” Scharff Weisberg teamed with Peter Crawford, of Crawford/Sherman Design, and lighting and video designer Doug Brant to deliver the organization’s messaging in “a unique and entertaining way.” Six generic building façades, representing foundation-supported programs (measuring as large as 42' x 22'), featured three-dimensional reliefs that followed the building architecture. Scharff Weisberg projected realistic video textures, such as bricks and limestone, onto the façades, and displayed video clips of the people and projects affected by the foundation’s donations. To showcase Robin Hood “shelters,” Scharff Weisberg mapped textures onto a five-story apartment house—designed by Crawford and fabricated by Atomic Scenic—and added projections showing the inside of an array of apartments as well as Google Street View images. All of the neighborhoods were set against a night sky backdrop with a silhouette cityscape, also designed by Crawford. The Robin Hood Foundation Gala For the six buildings Scharff Weisberg provided ten Christie LX+20 projectors: Four pairs were used to created edge-blended images on the four widest buildings; the other two buildings each required one projector. Each projector was driven by a channel from a coolux Pandoras Box media server and transmitted over fiber. The content was then warped to precisely match the visual elements to the architectural elements. Other technology used on the project came from Barco, NEC, Lightware, Kramer, Gefen, Frezzi, Sony, Furman, and Motion Labs. “Transporting their guests to a land of wonder, Scharff Weisberg captured the magic of childhood, creatively emancipating the mind with fantastic visuals and architectural transcendence,” observed a judge. “I really liked the way they [used] 3D mapping and projection [on] architecture from the street to [create] an indoor immersive experience,” commented another. Best Use of A/V Technology for a Trade Show Booth for a Corporate Client Riverview Systems Group received the 2011 award for its work on the Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons 2010 Show in New Orleans, Louisiana. Collaborating with Zimmer, Inc. and Catalyst Exhibits, Riverview developed a refreshed exhibit layout that would be more vibrant and eye catching than in previous years. Restricted to a 20,000 sq. ft., the team used an X-shaped Moss centerpiece structure weighing over 8,000lbs, and lit it with one hundred twenty-two 72" Philips Color Kinetics ColorBlaze units, and almost 300 ColorBlasts. The central two-story control room and sales meeting structure was then wrapped with 275 WinVision tiles for maximum impact, in addition to a 50-tile Barco NX-4 wall, which provided the high-resolution presentation palette. A large assortment of Philips Vari-Lite and ETC fixtures was deployed for the booth, all controlled by two grandMA full-size consoles and a grandMA lite. The audio package included a Midas Venice 240 mixer, a Meyer Galileo loudspeaker management system, eight Meyer M’elodie loudspeakers, two Apogee AESB subs, two Crown MacroTec 2400 amps, and six channels of Shure UHF-R wireless mics. One judge remarked: “Impact design and solid engineering; Riverview set themselves apart with stunning visuals and structural prowess.” Another judge added, “The lighting rig was massive, but barely visible—achieving the open effect that the designers intended. In addition, the video displays complemented the exhibit without dominating the execution or look of the event.” The Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons Show. www.lightingandsoundamerica.com • August 2011 • 55 SPECIAL REPORT Most Innovative Use of A/V Technology for an Outdoor Event Visualfarm won the AV award for the “World’s Biggest Hug” project in Rio de Janeiro, executed in collaboration with Conselho Nacional do SESI, the nation’s top regulatory body. The iconic 124'-tall Christ statue served as the canvas for Visualfarm’s ambitious mapping project. The goal of the undertaking was to bring attention through the Internet and mass media to the sexual harassment of children, a serious issue in Brazil. The project was paid by the Conselho Nacional do SESI, and the Casa Nova/Monumenta Agency, which challenged Visualfarm to bring the remotely located statue to life with movement using projections. In two weeks, while overcoming dreary weather and several frustrating failed attempts, Visualfarm was able to successfully execute its mission the night before the unveiling. Carrying eight Sanyo PLC XF-47 projectors, cabling, generators, and a house mixer up to the hilltop site, Visualfarm placed box truss in front of the statue, 13' under its 26'-tall feet, and placed 16 PAR lights facing the VIP and media area. The lights were timed to increase in power, causing attendees’ pupils to close, preventing them from seeing that The “World’s Biggest Hug” in Rio de Janeiro. 56 • August 2011 • Lighting&Sound America the arms of the statue were no longer illuminated by the projection. In three-and-a-half hours, the crew stacked four pairs of projectors and executed the image-warping and blending on the 3D surface of the statue. To realize this, Visualfarm relied on a coolux Pandoras Box media player; creating high-definition video of the city of Rio shot from the top of the mountain, and 3D animations modeled from the statue that was projected to create the illusion of Christ’s embrace. The reaction was significant, and the campaign garnered major international media and viral attention. One judge exclaimed, “A challenging effect, a complicated execution, and an elegant message. The best art inspires and the best execution is invisible. Well done!” Another judge said, “Unpredictable weather, frank solutions, cultural significance: Visualfarm engaged the sacred, prepared for the unexpected, and impacted the world.” The InfoComm/LSA Staged Events Awards judges were David Barbour, editor-in-chief of Lighting&Sound America magazine; Jack Kelly, owner and designer of Eye Dialogue; Janne Mummert, director of business development, VER/Video Equipment Rentals; Tobin Neis, director of marketing, Barbizon Lighting Company; and Tom Stimson, MBA, CTS, president of The Stimson Group.