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Analog Way Helps Create Video Wall for  New Hudson Yards Location

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NYC – Analog Way Partners with Robert Derector Telecommunications, HB Communications and Leyard and Planar to Create a Unique Trading Floors’ Lounge for Wells Fargo’s New Hudson Yards Location

More details from Analog Way (www.analogway.com):

When Wells Fargo moved its Corporate & Investment Banking business in New York City to the new 30 Hudson Yards office tower its traders were treated to one of the most unique lounge areas anywhere.  Spanning the 14th and 15th floors, the open area features a 6 x 29-foot tall LED videowall from Leyard and Planar, a Leyard Company, driven by an Analog Way Picturall Pro media server.  The seamless LED column displays beautiful, natural and urban scenes – watching the content unfold is the perfect way to decompress away from the trading floors.

“Traders have such high-stress jobs and this secluded area near the staircase between the trading floors is meant as a place for them to lounge and relax before going back into the pit,” explains Dan Georgescu, Consultant with Robert Derector Telecommunications in New York.

Georgescu designed the technical solution for the space and worked closely with Analog Way, Leyard and Planar, RP Visual Solutions and HB Communications to deliver Wells Fargo’s vision for the one-of-a-kind videowall.

“The client and the architect had a vision for the space: to build a sense of extreme height and offer content that the traders would enjoy and that would promote relaxation,” Georgescu says.  “Once the architectural vision was in place we had to find the right technical solutions to suit the space and deliver the content.”

The Leyard® DirectLight® X LED Video Wall System with a 1.5mm pixel pitch was chosen to span the space in a configuration 29 feet tall by just six feet wide.  “It’s a very unique shape and one of the tallest, if not the tallest, we’ve done,” says John Bailey, Leyard and Planar Regional Account Manager for New York-New Jersey metro area.  “The public really appreciates displays that step outside the 16×9 boundary to create a greater ‘wow’ factor.”

Leyard and Planar are “the market leader in fine-pitch LED,” he notes, but “building seamless LED videowalls at large sizes is always a challenge, so attention to detail is key.”

Anaheim, California’s RP Visual Solutions devised a custom steel mounting structure for the videowall, which ensured that the Leyard DirectLight X displays remained flush throughout the columnar configuration, maximizing the product’s high quality. Leyard DirectLight offers fine-tuned adjustments that result in flawless, picture-perfect image quality” says Bailey.

New Jersey-based HB Communications, Inc. was charged with the integration and building of the space, and its creative services team designed the custom content specifically to fit the unique shape of the videowall.  “The architects did a good job choosing the shape of the wall to complement the space,” says Vice President of Marketing Dan Barron, who was also the Creative Director.

In terms of content, however, “it’s easy to get nice portrait or landscape shots of the natural world, but we had to think about what would work for such a narrow strip of wall,” Barron explains.  “We shot a wide variety of locations from New York City to Yosemite, San Francisco and Big Sur, California.  We used RED cameras to capture the 8K content, which was organized into two categories: city and energy, such as New York City’s new One World Trade Center, Ellis Island at sunset, Central Park and uniquely shaped structures; and nature and peace, such as the Golden Gate Bridge, Yosemite, Big Sur and Big Basin’s tall trees.

“Although the videowall does not display 8K we shot 8K so when you pare the image area down to a narrow strip you still have enough resolution to look good at that huge scale,” says Barron.

“We had to have enough vertical pixels to make sure we weren’t stretching the image to fit the wall,” echoes Georgescu.  The custom 8K content was uploaded into Analog Way’s Picturall Pro media server where it was split into five 1080P feeds for the videowall controller to ingest and sync into one tall image.

“We had to make sure the system was 100 percent operational before Wells Fargo moved into the building,” Georgescu adds. “To ensure that, we had the videowall up and running 24/7 for 45 days allowing for any ‘kinks’ to be vetted prior to the move in.”

 

Georgescu had worked on several previous projects with Analog Way, and Analog Way Regional Sales Manager Seth Teates was confident that Picturall Pro would be “a perfect fit” for the one-of-a-kind Leyard and Planar video wall.

“Picturall Pro is a very powerful, ultra-reliable server capable of full resolution playback of uncompressed images on very large pixel spaces,” says Teates.  “This project would have been beyond the capabilities of many servers, but it was right in our wheelhouse.  Picturall Pro fulfilled all the requirements with headroom to spare.”

Teates gives kudos to the smooth coordination of the teams from Derector, HB Communications, Leyard and Planar and Analog Way that “worked so well together” to bring Wells Fargo’s unique vision to life.

“The space has turned into what Wells Fargo ultimately imagined it could be,” says Barron, a decompression zone filled with images of the big, beautiful world outside the trading floor.

Structuretone was the general contractor for the project and The Switzer Group the architects.  RCI Communications worked under HB Communications to perform the physical installation of the mount and videowall.