Immersive entertainment venue Illuminarium is taking visitors on a multi-sensory journey to the wilds of Africa, with the help of cutting-edge technology, including the latest disguise hardware.
Last summer, the first Illuminarium opened in downtown Atlanta with the debut projection-mapped spectacle ‘WILD: A Safari Experience’. It showcases Africa’s most exotic animals captured by 240-degree native field-of-view custom camera arrays that transport visitors to a safari in Africa. Visual storytelling platform, disguise, forms part of an impressive fleet of technologies that help drive Illuminarium’s massive, ultra-high-resolution displays, taking guests on an amazing multi-sensory journey.
Illuminarium Experiences is a digitally-delivered, global experiential entertainment brand which creates, produces, markets and manages immersive entertainment spectacles. It combines traditional motion picture production techniques with Virtual Reality to enable visitors to view real-world, filmed content in a 360º environment without wearable hardware of any kind.
The first of many planned Illuminarium venues opened July 1, 2021 in Atlanta, hosting the show, ‘WILD: A Safari Experience’, with disguise offering an effective workflow for pushing a massive amount of pixels throughout the venue. Illuminarium features two projection spaces. The first, comprising about 2,000 square feet, hosts a pre-show experience from which audience members are pulled into the second space. The larger room features more than 18,000 square feet of projection that is achieved with 46 Panasonic 4K laser projectors, 18 disguise vx 4 media servers and, at the time of opening, 12 disguise rx rendering nodes. The scale of the show is more than 16 times the resolution of 4K content.
To fuel the unique Illuminarium experience required media servers powering 46 4K outputs – pushing 174 million pixels of content that are regularly updated. The larger room has an overall 37243 x 2100 pixel canvas, so producing a single rendered piece of content at that resolution, while also targeting 60 fps content and HDR workflows, meant rendering a huge number of pixels. A technical workflow had to be established that would work for the creatives and scale repeatedly for the reels of content that have continued since the opening of the venue.
A further requirement was to not compromise content quality during the capture and display processes. Any signal degradation in that chain was unacceptable when creating a truly immersive experience that would transport the audience. disguise worked closely with the Illuminarium team and Electrosonic, the system integrator, to overcome these challenges.
The key to meeting Illuminarium’s needs was to break up the massive content into smaller and more manageable chunks. Once the content was diced into pieces, workflows within disguise would synchronise the content and pull it all together again to play out in one coherent space that was fully synchronised.
1:1 scale mock-up built
To previsualise the show and understand how to use the space and its massive pixel power for maximum creative success, the Illuminarium team built a 1:1 scale mock-up of the room in one of the content offices to see what the experience might feel like. Shrinking the size of the space allowed the team to lay out the end experience in 3D and design for a horizon line that would feel correct. They even placed miniature figures in the space to give a sense of the room being populated by 50-200 people.
The mock-up also enabled disguise to put its OmniCal system for projector alignment to the test at small scale to see how things would work when scaled up for the full-size experience. The incredibly fast and efficient OmniCal feature is vital to the day-to-day operation of Illuminarium’s 46 projectors and any recalibrating that might need to be done from time to time by the maintenance crew.
Currently on site, 18 disguise vx 4 media servers drive the space; all with upgraded storage drives for a total of 60 terabytes of storage in the director and understudy machines. The increased storage capacity is not only required to accommodate the show but also enables the local servers to hold enough content to rotate the reels of content as desired.
The system is capable of capturing inputs from realtime systems and importing them via the video inputs on the media servers. In addition, 12 disguise rx render nodes (at the time of opening) with RenderStream take content from a realtime engine, such as Unreal or Notch, that responds to LIDAR data captured in the space. This means content can be generated in realtime for the constant shows throughout the experience and for Illuminarium After Dark, a cocktail and curated eats experience in seven lush, digital settings offered Thursday through Saturday evenings. There are plans for future content reels that run completely in realtime as well.
“The sheer scale of this project and the technology required to make it happen was not attempted by many before us. Getting Illuminarium from idea to execution took us about two years – gathering the right technology partners, such as disguise, and designing a system that could deliver on this ambitious concept,” says Brian Allen, Executive Vice-President of Technology and Content Integration, Illuminarium Experiences.
Realtime interaction
disguise vx 4 media servers enabled Illuminarium to project 174 million pixels at 60 fps on to its walls and floors. Realtime elements, powered by disguise rx render nodes and RenderStream, enhanced the show – producing picture footprints in the sand that respond to steps (with the help of lidar motion sensors from Ouster) as audience members traverse the space.
Since its opening, Illuminarium has already upgraded its fleet of rx render nodes to a total of 45 to gain the ability to generate content in real time on all 18,000 square feet of its large venue.
Illuminarium is believed to be unique in using cluster rendering for a projection-mapped experience. This technology breaks boundaries that were previously difficult to overcome – broadening horizons and expanding the scale of what’s immersive and interactive in the venue. In the future, Illuminarium experiences will only have higher resolution, better fidelity, more rendering capabilities and more ambitious content.
Through a convergence of cutting-edge technologies from the most impressive brands in the industry, Illuminarium has essentially created a new media infrastructure that will bring realistic experiences into its huge venue.
Reference : AVinteractive