The Norris Museum is based in the centre of the historic market town of St Ives, Cambridgeshire. We will be supplying AV software and hardware on this project which will involve four exhibits.
We’re pleased to be providing the audio visual hardware for part of a project at Winchester Museum that will be focused on a model of Winchester with multimedia content.
The Woodland Trust is developing a Hidden Secrets Trail at Great Nott Wood near Lake Windermere. The site has a variety of ancient woodland features and is undergoing restoration.
In 1937, RAF Bawdsey became the first fully operational Radar station in the world, just eighteen months after it had first been established that approaching aircraft could be detected using transmitted radio waves.
This project for the Peak District National Park Authority will see new exhibitions at three of its Visitor Centres at Bakewell, Castleton and Edale, designed to inspire visitors to “get out and explore”.
We’ve recently been producing films for interactive exhibits at Wardown Park Museum, part of Luton Culture, using professional green screen studio facilities. The client provided scripts, actors and costumes; Imagemakers were scriptwriters and executive directors; we planned and directed the shoot.
The Daniel Adamson is a working tug tender, recently restored. The stunning art deco lounge has presented some challenges in the use of technology and part of the answer has been to introduce the Bar Tender, a local Liverpudlian.
The University of Essex has appointed Wide Sky Design to develop an interactive system that will acknowledge sponsors and donors to the university and recognise special initiatives. It will be situated in the reception of the Silberrad Student Centre where it will make an impact on visitors.
Flexibility, ease of use, and the ability to enhance the visitor experience are all reasons why clients are increasingly choosing to use our content management system to power their interactive exhibits. The system is designed to give clients full control over the content of their exhibits now and in the future.
Luton’s Wardown Park Museum has been awarded £1.8million from the Heritage Lottery Fund to conserve the building and transform the way its story is told.
The work will open up new areas of the building and will give visitors an insight into life above and below stairs in a wealthy family home during the Victorian period.
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