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Promotional feature: IDEATTACK
IDEATTACK is working on a magical destination resort in Hunan Province, China.
Founders Natasha Varnica and Dan Thomas walk us through the fairytale experience
Science centres: Sparks Fly
The Wolf Museum of Exploration +
Innovation (MOXI) is a brand new science
centre in Santa Barbara, with a refreshing
approach. CEO Steve Hinkley tells all
Theme parks: Speed Demons
PortAventura’s COO Mark Robinson on the
company’s latest investment – Ferrari Land
Promotional feature: Simworx
UK-based attractions manufacturer Simworx is building on its global
portfolio with a range of new projects in Dubai, China and Spain
Attractions: That’s the Spirit
Jameson’s visitor experience centre has
been revamped by BRC Imagination
Arts. Tom Anstey went to Dublin and
talked to the team about the project
Promotional feature: FORREC
FORREC has worked with some of the world’s
most recognisable characters and IPs. Here Steven Rhys
shares some tips on bringing those cherished worlds to life
New Smartify app brings visitors closer to their favourite artworks, explains Anna Lowe
Anna Lowe, Smartify
Smartify is an app that allows gallery visitors to use their mobile phone to identify an artwork and unlock a wealth of information and content about it.
“When visiting museums, galleries or art fairs, we all see artworks we are curious about but then struggle to access more information or to remember the artwork afterwards,” says Smartify’s Anna Lowe. “Smartify was founded by a team who all encountered the same problem when visiting these attractions. Our goal is to make the rich stories about every artwork more accessible, and to support art venues financially and in reaching new audiences.”
The app uses advanced image recognition and AR to scan the painting and release a variety of audio, text and video insights. The user can save artworks to a personal library.
Smartify is already working with partner museums – including the Met, The Wallace Collection, Rijksmuseum and the Royal Academy of Arts – to supply tailor-made digital visitor guides. Smartify’s founders want to “democratise access to art” by putting the information the visitor wants directly in their hands.
The social enterprise initiative – a UK-government funded Community Interest Company – a UK-government funded social enterprise – was founded by tech experts Thanos Kokkiniotis and Nick Mueller, mobile solutions specialist Ron Vrijmoet, and arts education project manager Lowe.
“We work in partnership with museums or galleries globally to make artworks and information available on the platform, and then provide data analytics on the audiences visiting and scanning artworks,” Lowe says. “The service is completely free to the partners and we actively encourage them to advise us on future development and new features for the app.”
“We believe nothing beats the physical experience of visiting a museum or gallery and want to make it easy to discover, remember and share art.”
attractions-kit keyword: Smartify
“When visiting museums, galleries or art fairs, we all see artworks we are curious about but then struggle to access more information or to remember the artwork afterwards,”
Smartify has partnered with London’s Wallace Collection, putting a personal interactive art guide in the visitor’s hand
Holovis’s Amy Steele opens the door to the Mystic Timbers shed
Amy Steele, Holovis
At Cedar Fair’s Kings Island, Holovis has created a multi-layered story-driven pre-show for the newly opened wooden coaster, Mystic Timbers, with the possibility guests will see a different outcome each time.
“This project sets a trend for rollercoasters going forward,” says Amy Steele, vice president of development at Holovis.
The multimedia queue line experience invites visitors to delve into the story of the lumber mill where Mystic Timbers – built by Great Coasters International – is situated.
The mill, property of the Miami River Lumber Company, was abandoned in 1983, but no one knows the reason why. Seemingly, the answer is in the shed.
“We took compelling and immersive storytelling and combined it with an incredible wooden coaster. That mix created something truly special and shows how storytelling can be as integral a part of the experience as the coaster itself,” says Steele
The detailed backstory begins in the queue line and ends with the shed, a multimedia experience with cutting-edge audiovisual, multimedia and animation effects.
“Every detail alludes to why the mill has been abandoned for so long,” Steele says. “But they’ll never discover all of its secrets. The experience changes, playing out different scenarios so guests are unlikely to see the same show twice. Multiple rides are essential to truly discover ‘what’s in the shed’.”
attractions-kit keyword: HOLOVIS
“This project sets a trend for rollercoasters going forward,”
Holovis’s queue line experience tells a multi-layered, multimedia story
MULTMEDIA?/AV CASE STUDY
Christie articulates Richard Mosse’s thermographic art
Richard Mosse, artist
A recent exhibition at the Barbican, London, featured footage taken by a long-range infrared thermographic camera capable of detecting body heat some 30km (19 miles) away.
The filmmaker and artist Richard Mosse took video and images of refugees arriving in Europe using the military-grade technology for an art installation called Incoming. The camera blurs the faces of the subjects and makes it impossible to tell what they look like or what their origin is, both dehumanising them and simultaneously showing there is no difference between people.
“This camera technology is a very special, unique way of imaging the world,” says Mosse. “It’s not a particularly hi-res camera, only one megapixel, and it’s monochrome. It’s a heat signature of relative temperature difference. It’s showing us the contours of relative heat difference within a given scene, so it’s about contrast.”
To display the works at the Barbican, Christie M Series 3DLP projectors were used for their ability to show the luminous quality and tiny details of the footage on a large-scale projection. Three HD10K-M 11,000 lumen projectors took the tiniest details – as small as human hairs, which were filmed from hundreds of metres away – and displayed them on 8x5-metre screens around the Barbican’s curved walls.
“The high-end projection technology married to this very unusual military surveillance technology created an experience that felt entirely new, shockingly unfamiliar, and beautifully articulated,” said Mosse.
“The Christie projectors provide enormous scale and staggering level of detail, very crisp and sharp, and an extraordinary intensity of luminosity. Christie was also able to adjust focus on a curving arc. The articulation of the original image is far beyond our wildest expectations.”
Cinematographer Trevor Tweeten and composer Ben Frost worked with Mosse on the project.
attractions-kit keyword: Christie
“This camera technology is a very special, unique way of imaging the world,”
The projections were displayed along the Barbican’s curved wall
In today’s premium spa environment, every detail shapes the guest experience – right down to
the softness of towels and the freshness of linens. [more...]
Promotional feature: IDEATTACK
IDEATTACK is working on a magical destination resort in Hunan Province, China.
Founders Natasha Varnica and Dan Thomas walk us through the fairytale experience
Science centres: Sparks Fly
The Wolf Museum of Exploration +
Innovation (MOXI) is a brand new science
centre in Santa Barbara, with a refreshing
approach. CEO Steve Hinkley tells all
Theme parks: Speed Demons
PortAventura’s COO Mark Robinson on the
company’s latest investment – Ferrari Land
Promotional feature: Simworx
UK-based attractions manufacturer Simworx is building on its global
portfolio with a range of new projects in Dubai, China and Spain
Attractions: That’s the Spirit
Jameson’s visitor experience centre has
been revamped by BRC Imagination
Arts. Tom Anstey went to Dublin and
talked to the team about the project
Promotional feature: FORREC
FORREC has worked with some of the world’s
most recognisable characters and IPs. Here Steven Rhys
shares some tips on bringing those cherished worlds to life
New Smartify app brings visitors closer to their favourite artworks, explains Anna Lowe
Anna Lowe, Smartify
Smartify is an app that allows gallery visitors to use their mobile phone to identify an artwork and unlock a wealth of information and content about it.
“When visiting museums, galleries or art fairs, we all see artworks we are curious about but then struggle to access more information or to remember the artwork afterwards,” says Smartify’s Anna Lowe. “Smartify was founded by a team who all encountered the same problem when visiting these attractions. Our goal is to make the rich stories about every artwork more accessible, and to support art venues financially and in reaching new audiences.”
The app uses advanced image recognition and AR to scan the painting and release a variety of audio, text and video insights. The user can save artworks to a personal library.
Smartify is already working with partner museums – including the Met, The Wallace Collection, Rijksmuseum and the Royal Academy of Arts – to supply tailor-made digital visitor guides. Smartify’s founders want to “democratise access to art” by putting the information the visitor wants directly in their hands.
The social enterprise initiative – a UK-government funded Community Interest Company – a UK-government funded social enterprise – was founded by tech experts Thanos Kokkiniotis and Nick Mueller, mobile solutions specialist Ron Vrijmoet, and arts education project manager Lowe.
“We work in partnership with museums or galleries globally to make artworks and information available on the platform, and then provide data analytics on the audiences visiting and scanning artworks,” Lowe says. “The service is completely free to the partners and we actively encourage them to advise us on future development and new features for the app.”
“We believe nothing beats the physical experience of visiting a museum or gallery and want to make it easy to discover, remember and share art.”
attractions-kit keyword: Smartify
“When visiting museums, galleries or art fairs, we all see artworks we are curious about but then struggle to access more information or to remember the artwork afterwards,”
Smartify has partnered with London’s Wallace Collection, putting a personal interactive art guide in the visitor’s hand
Holovis’s Amy Steele opens the door to the Mystic Timbers shed
Amy Steele, Holovis
At Cedar Fair’s Kings Island, Holovis has created a multi-layered story-driven pre-show for the newly opened wooden coaster, Mystic Timbers, with the possibility guests will see a different outcome each time.
“This project sets a trend for rollercoasters going forward,” says Amy Steele, vice president of development at Holovis.
The multimedia queue line experience invites visitors to delve into the story of the lumber mill where Mystic Timbers – built by Great Coasters International – is situated.
The mill, property of the Miami River Lumber Company, was abandoned in 1983, but no one knows the reason why. Seemingly, the answer is in the shed.
“We took compelling and immersive storytelling and combined it with an incredible wooden coaster. That mix created something truly special and shows how storytelling can be as integral a part of the experience as the coaster itself,” says Steele
The detailed backstory begins in the queue line and ends with the shed, a multimedia experience with cutting-edge audiovisual, multimedia and animation effects.
“Every detail alludes to why the mill has been abandoned for so long,” Steele says. “But they’ll never discover all of its secrets. The experience changes, playing out different scenarios so guests are unlikely to see the same show twice. Multiple rides are essential to truly discover ‘what’s in the shed’.”
attractions-kit keyword: HOLOVIS
“This project sets a trend for rollercoasters going forward,”
Holovis’s queue line experience tells a multi-layered, multimedia story
MULTMEDIA?/AV CASE STUDY
Christie articulates Richard Mosse’s thermographic art
Richard Mosse, artist
A recent exhibition at the Barbican, London, featured footage taken by a long-range infrared thermographic camera capable of detecting body heat some 30km (19 miles) away.
The filmmaker and artist Richard Mosse took video and images of refugees arriving in Europe using the military-grade technology for an art installation called Incoming. The camera blurs the faces of the subjects and makes it impossible to tell what they look like or what their origin is, both dehumanising them and simultaneously showing there is no difference between people.
“This camera technology is a very special, unique way of imaging the world,” says Mosse. “It’s not a particularly hi-res camera, only one megapixel, and it’s monochrome. It’s a heat signature of relative temperature difference. It’s showing us the contours of relative heat difference within a given scene, so it’s about contrast.”
To display the works at the Barbican, Christie M Series 3DLP projectors were used for their ability to show the luminous quality and tiny details of the footage on a large-scale projection. Three HD10K-M 11,000 lumen projectors took the tiniest details – as small as human hairs, which were filmed from hundreds of metres away – and displayed them on 8x5-metre screens around the Barbican’s curved walls.
“The high-end projection technology married to this very unusual military surveillance technology created an experience that felt entirely new, shockingly unfamiliar, and beautifully articulated,” said Mosse.
“The Christie projectors provide enormous scale and staggering level of detail, very crisp and sharp, and an extraordinary intensity of luminosity. Christie was also able to adjust focus on a curving arc. The articulation of the original image is far beyond our wildest expectations.”
Cinematographer Trevor Tweeten and composer Ben Frost worked with Mosse on the project.
attractions-kit keyword: Christie
“This camera technology is a very special, unique way of imaging the world,”
The projections were displayed along the Barbican’s curved wall
Global Wellness Day (GWD) will mark its 15th anniversary on Saturday 13 June 2026, with the
theme: #JoyMagenta – a celebration of the healing qualities of simple gestures and activities
that spark joy.
Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider,
HUM2N, to launch a clinic at Six Senses London, at The Whiteley.
As part of its first hotel partnership, Mayrlife – the medical health resort company known for its
site in Altaussee, Austria – has launched a day clinic at the Rosewood Vienna.
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, will imminently unveil its most significant
redevelopment since its launch in 2002 to create an integrated wellness model combining
training, recovery and relaxation.
Rosewood Le Guanahani St Barth, on the northeast coast of Saint Barthélemy in the French
West Indies, is offering a programme of ocean-inspired yoga classes between 8-14 June to
celebrate Global Wellness Day (GWD).
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, in Malaysia, has revealed a schedule for Global Wellness Day
(GWD) that includes guided rainforest walks, mindful movement and guided coastal meditation
experiences.
Longevitix, a clinical platform for preventive and longevity medicine, has launched its AI-
powered intelligence system to help physicians deliver continuous, personalised longevity-
focused care at scale.
Atmantan Wellness Centre, an integrative wellness destination in Mulshi, near Pune in India, is
expanding its portfolio by adding a new centre in Hyderabad that will launch between 2028 and
2029.
A recent survey by the UK Spa Association (UKSA) into the industry’s approach to cancer care
has revealed that almost half of participating respondents (46 per cent) are unaware that
cancer is a disability and guests with a cancer diagnosis must be given
In today’s premium spa environment, every detail shapes the guest experience – right down to
the softness of towels and the freshness of linens. [more...]