ABU DHABI, UAE – The United Arab Emirates (UAE) celebrated 45 years of unification with a National Day that featured a huge multi-surface video projection in Abu Dhabi. The event, staged Dec. 2 at the request of the Crown Prince’s court, was held for an invited crowd of dignitaries. Balich Worldwide Shows contacted Tom van Hemelryk, VP Global Sports and Special Events at PRG, to provide both the technical expertise and technology for this video mapping production, which was fed by eight d3 4x4pro media servers.
More details from d3 (www.d3technologies.com):
Tom brought together, Yves Winand, PRG Belgium and Bill Ainley from the company’s UAE operation to work with the design specification from Balich Worldwide Shows.
The complex show included hundreds of performers and musicians, set against a sweeping backdrop, created by Charles Darby and the team at Clonwerk, with vessels sailing on the sea in the foreground and the desert stretching into the distance.
The production’s floor projection surface, measured 189 x 35 meters, and was covered by 80 Panasonic 21K Series projectors, plus four 35-meter scenic sand dunes, which were tracked across the stage and covered by 16 Barco projectors. Two 40-meter side projection screens were covered by 28 Panasonic 21K Series projectors, whilst a 16-meter, semi-circular, rising sun surface was covered by two Barco projectors.
One d3 4x4pro mixed master and five output machines, drove 71 double-stacked projectors; two understudies provided redundancy. The show had 76 individual d3 outputs to calibrate and blend. In addition, the 16 projectors dedicated to the moving sand dunes had to be 3D grid calibrated for set automation tracking.
“d3 was chosen on the first approach of the project to design, previsualize, line up and play out the show,” says Yves Winand, Senior Video Project Manager and Technical Advisor at PRG Belgium. “A strong partner was needed for this challenging project, and we worked closely with d3 to improve some tools onsite to save time for the lineup, where we had to share nights with lighting programming, rehearsals and the late arrival of the big moving elements.”
Chris Simcock, d3 Server Technician from Sensel Studio, notes that, “d3 offered a range of features that integrated well together: Stage enabled the technical team to simulate projector positions, rotations and lenses; Footprints highlighted projection zones; and DynamicBlend automated projection balancing. But the key advantage was d3’s unique ability to simulate and drive a show in real-time.”
“The workflow was designed with d3 in mind” says Nils Porrmann from dandelion + burdock, Event Screens Production Manager, responsible for managing the creative and media server workflow. “The content team was briefed about delivery specs and all the projector coverage analysis was done in d3. Its flexibility with large output numbers, dynamic edge blending and projector calibration features was essential to the production.”
“d3 was very proactive in the lead up and during the r14 [software] updating process with ongoing remote involvement throughout,” says Bill Ainley, Head of Video and Project Manager at PRG Gearhouse Dubai.
“The system proved solid and reliable throughout the three weeks of commissioning, rehearsals and show,” Ainley reports. “We were able to redesign and reconfigure with minimal lead time, enabling us to quickly respond to creative and logistical updates.”
Other primary players in the production were Nicholas Di Fonzo, System Engineer from PRG Belgium; Thomas Kother, d3 Server Technician from flow7k; and Miguel Ribeiro, d3 Modeler. Photo Credits: Luca Parisse for Balich Worldwide Shows. Show Credits: Creative & Executive Production Balich WorldWide Shows.