Incorporating multimedia into your exhibition design can be difficult. Whether you are designing a space for a film set, mall, museum, or trade show, installing too many multimedia components can make the exhibit feel overwhelming and disorganized. Not enough multimedia technology can make your exhibit look stark and monotonous. How do you choose which types of multimedia to include in your exhibit design and strike the perfect balance?
Solving this dilemma becomes much easier when you approach this as a decision between digital and analog media choices, first by understanding their differences, and then determining how your exhibit calls for differing degrees of digital and analog design solutions.
Multimedia, in terms of exhibition design, combines two different types of media technology – analog and digital – to guide an audience through a space while helping them connect with the story being told.
Printed media like magazines, newspapers, traditional signage, film reels, and other non-digital sources of information assembled and presented without the use of computers.
Computer technology is used for programmable video, images, web content, projection mapping, and other computer-operated applications.
Knowing what types of multimedia matter for each kind of exhibit is what makes your exhibition the most immersive, entertaining, informative, and insightful at each touchpoint.
Chicago's Adler Planetarium uses multimedia to support a fun, interactive learning experience.
When choosing analog and digital multimedia, consider which is the most appropriate for your design. If your exhibit tells a story of ancient technology, installing too much digital media can detract from the atmosphere. Conversely, a scene set in the future might need a large amount of advanced digital media to feel more authentic.
Multimedia largely determines how your audience interacts with your environment and how immersed they become. The technology must align with the overall look and feel of the environment to become engaging and interactive.
In large exhibits, some type of multimedia usually denotes the entrance – most often, a digital kiosk detailing what to expect from the exhibit and how to access each part, along with a brochure, pamphlet or other information.
Multimedia at the entrance, by design, should take only a few minutes to fully interact with. Since large installations tend to draw crowds and cause backups, keeping multimedia on the smaller side once past the entrance keeps groups moving.
When incorporating digital media into exhibit design, screen size, type, and orientation can be one of the most important decisions. From single screens to multi-screen video walls – options abound.
Size
The screen must be large enough to be viewed from the appropriate distance while displaying the right colors, movement, and resolution to signify when and where to look.
Number
Personal small screens create an intimate experience for the visitor, while multi-screens can work together to produce larger images and greater stimuli.
Touchscreens
Add new levels of interactive control with touch-display information.
Other screen considerations include cost, durability, ease of integration, and user interface. The best exhibition design companies will be able to assist with these decisions by making sure all factors are fully taken into account and itemized.
In this themed environment for the holidays, multimedia screens fit right into the concept.
Whether playing analog sound recordings of audio essays or showing videos on a digital wall display, the technology you choose should provide supplementary information to support the main exhibit without distracting or disorienting visitors. An interactive station that generates loud group conversation during a part of the exhibit meant for quiet reflection, for example, might feel out of place and become distracting.
Mixed (augmented) reality and virtual reality are great ways to transport an audience for a more immersive storytelling experience. At trade shows, a vendor who builds treehouses might use virtual reality technology to show visitors what their installed product looks like at the top of the trees. The same booth might design a “mixed reality” station as well, which gives visitors the ability to “design” a treehouse on their phone and aim it at a tree prop for a preview.
Not sure how much digital and analog multimedia you need to plan for? The best exhibition design companies will be able to explain which technological components are the most important for your exhibit and why. An exhibition design company will also help you consider the strengths of each type of media relative to your audience to better shape and inform their experience according to your overall message and storytelling goals.
At Bridgewater Studio, we help museums and cultural institutions develop interactive multimedia exhibitions to bring stories, information, and experiences to life for visitors of all ages. As a full-service design and production studio, our clients enjoy a single point of contact from inception through installation. Our media and technology department offers expertise in incorporating digital touchscreens, LED walls, mixed reality activations, and multi-sensory digital immersions. Book a free strategy session today to see how partnering with Bridgewater can help your next exhibition design reach its fullest potential.