We design the AV environments that make people forget they're in a building. Immersive exhibits, themed attractions, spatial audio, show control, and interactive installations. technology in service of the story.
Tell Us About Your ProjectMuseums and themed entertainment venues are some of the most demanding AV environments we work in. The technology has to be completely reliable. it runs all day, every day, with no operator. and it has to disappear into the experience. Visitors should never notice the projector or the speaker array. They should just feel something.
We've built 360° LED wall environments for science centers, immersive projection spaces, interactive installations that respond to visitor presence, and VR experiences integrated into permanent venue infrastructure. We understand show control, media server workflows, and the difference between a system that runs perfectly on opening day and one that keeps running six months later without constant intervention.
Our fluency in both the creative and the technical sides of this work is what separates us. We can read an experience designer's vision document and translate it into AV specifications. and then build it.
Most AV integrators approach museum and themed entertainment work as a technical problem. We approach it as a design problem with technical constraints. The experience comes first. The system is built to serve it.
That means we read the narrative brief. We participate in design meetings. We understand blocking and flow. how visitors move through a space and how the AV system should respond to that movement. And we program systems that fail gracefully instead of catastrophically, because in a public venue, the show must go on.
Themed entertainment installations don't get a reset. Once the exhibit opens, the system runs 8+ hours a day, 365 days a year. We engineer for that reality: redundant playback systems, automated startup and shutdown sequences, remote monitoring, and spare parts programs.
We've maintained exhibits that have been running continuously for five years without a single visitor-impacting failure. That's not luck. it's engineering and a maintenance relationship that keeps the system healthy over time.