Brightsign ‘breaks glass’ at world’s tallest building
BrightSign media players were selected for an LG OLED floor display which mimics glass that cracks when stepped on, in an attraction on the 125th floor of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
A trip to the top of Dubai’s Burj Khalifa skyscraper is not for the faint-hearted. At 160 stories and over 828m tall, if offers breathtaking views from the world’s highest outdoor observation deck and a high-speed cruise in the furthest-travelling elevator on the planet. Thrill seekers can also experience scaling the outside of the structure and parachuting off the top thanks to an immersive virtual reality simulation.
It was in this context that the tower’s owners Emaar Properties looked to create a sensational new attraction on the 125th floor of the building known as At the Top, which receives around 10,000 visitors a day. Together with digital media partner LG, Emaar developed the concept of an interactive, realistic simulation of a glass floor above the city that appears to crack when stepped on.
“They wanted something really spectacular and very entertaining,” said Abdul Bakhrani, CEO of Dubai-based digital media studio and systems integrator DigiComm, which created the content, media and special effects for the attraction as well as for other installations within the building including the VR experience. With seven world records to its name, not least world’s tallest building, Burj Khalifa is all about superlatives.
Eighteen LG 55-inch OLED 8K resolution screens made of extremely durable toughened glass make up the floor, powered by two BrightSign XT1144 expanded I/O players. The screens display a highly realistic visual animation of the city 456m below, which changes according to the time of day and season, scheduled and controlled by the BrightSign players.
Fifteen Nexmosphere XDW-M44 sensors are used in the installation. On one side there are seven Nexmosphere sensors connected to the RS232 XM-350 Xperience Controller and on the other, there are eight sensors connected. These Xperience Controllers then link up to the BrightSign XT1144 media players.
When a visitor trips a sensor, a virtual crack starts forming on the skywalk floor and escalates; as they keep walking, the glass is cracking beneath them. The high-resolution CGI graphics combined with synchronised audio results in a thrilling sensation of glass cracking beneath the visitor’s feet, 125 floors above ground.
According to Bakhrani, using OLED screens in this way was something new, and deploying motion sensors with so many thousands of people was also a challenge. “It took quite a bit of trial and error to get the configuration just right. We ourselves didn’t know how it would work with such large visitor numbers. We were testing the waters, gathering feedback and constantly improving. It took about two weeks of finetuning once it was live to perfect it.”
BrightSign players were selected because they are highly robust, technically viable and cost-effective. “The requirement was for players that could be deployed and then left to run 24-hours a day with minimal management,” said Bakhrani. It is not anticipated that the media content will change for some time as the exhibit is highly popular and effective and most visitors are tourists who come only once to Burj Khalifa. “It’s very realistic. Some people think it’s real and feel frightened.”
“The glass floor has really added a new dimension to the At the Top experience for the visitors,” said Bakhrani. “There are a number of high-tech attractions that together make a visit to Burj Khalifa truly unforgettable. This is a world-class venue, so it’s essential that everything that’s done adds to the exhilaration of being there, and it’s certainly been achieved with the glass floor.”
Installation of the project took around two months, with work taking place between 1 am and dawn when the building is closed to visitors. The screens are regularly cleaned throughout the day.
LG, BrightSign and DigiComm have previously collaborated on numerous projects, including an unforgettable shark experience at the Dubai Aquarium & Underwater Zoo that combines digital technology with live fish.
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Posted: 27th February 2020