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Digital Projection provides panoramic images at French Library

Digital Projection 3-Chip DLP HIGHlite laser projectors have been deployed by Auvisys at the newly opened Alexis de Tocqueville library in Caen, France, among a range of AV, lighting and videowall projection equipment.

The library was designed by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas from OMA, the building, shaped like a St Andrew’s cross, hosts over one million art works and is organised around four themed areas: arts, literature, sciences and technologies and human sciences. With a total area of 11,700sqm (including 5,800sqm open to the public), this new flagship cultural centre hosts an auditorium for conferences, exhibition venues, reading rooms, a restaurant and a café, as well as administration and preservation areas.

dUCKS scéno, an agency specialised in scenography design for theatres, concert halls, museums and exhibitions, as well as special venues, created the backdrops for the various spaces. For the Tocqueville library project, they deployed the equipment used in the various areas’ scenic layouts, including the videowall projection, and the auditorium’s scenic machinery.

“We completed this project in two months on top of the cabling and networking work,” said Christophe Vallée, sales manager at Auvisys.

At the heart of the library, the Science & Technologies centre welcomes visitors with a semi-cylindrical video fresco. This particular part of the project presented challenges due to the size of the projection surface (22m x 5m) and the ambient light in the room, which is made of glass. Auvisys opted for two ceiling mounted 3-Chip DLP HIGHlite projectors from Digital Projection, to project a panoramic image. This series of projectors was selected for its high resolution, image quality, brightness and low maintenance thanks to the laser source. Content is managed by a Modulo Pi media server, which ensures uniformity due to its warping and blending functions.

“Digital Projection was the first manufacturer to offer high-brightness laser, and their team benefits from a technological advance in high power brightness,” commented Vallée. “For this project, laser was a better option than classic lamps because of the necessary long life.

“Laser technology is perfectly suited for image blending because of the uniformity in the whites it offers. This technology also reduces added costs for lamps, regular maintenance of the products and the need to calibrate the video projection every time an action is required.

In the new 150-seater auditorium, Auvisys also selected a projector from the HIGHlite series. Installed on a motorised platform situated at the back of the auditorium, the projector feeds a retractable screen measuring eight metres long by seven metres wide. The projector is HDBaseT fed, using an Extron DTP system linked to various sources.

“It was particularly important for us to respect the characteristics of this space which is very transparent,” explained Amélie Chassériaux, project manager for dUCKS scéno. The AV equipment hangs from the ceiling in order to allow for the glass facade to be free from any technical element. A motorised curtain with sound and blackout properties was fitted to isolate the auditorium from the outside.

A Dante audio network allows for the auditorium conferences to be broadcasted in the entire library thanks to broadcasting modules. Furniture available on free access is also equipped with a screen and a sound system, while a console invites visitors to watch movies and various multimedia content.

www.digitalprojection.com