What would you draw on one of Dublin’s most recognisable buildings? Your name in lights? A giant tetris animation? A stickman walking? A giant pen? Is that unrealistic? It’s basically filling in lots of squares! It’s your canvas and you can do as you wish with it.
Daft.ie and the Ulster Bank Dublin Theatre Festival - September 24 to October 11 - are taking one of Dublin’s tallest buildings and allowing you to play with it. All you have to do is download their software and animate your thoughts to be broadcast onto the city skyline.
Just head on over to here and use playhousefan as password. That’s pre-launch information, that.
It’s easy enough, honest. Who knows what you could put up there!
Basically Liberty Hall will be a a 50 metre, low resolution, TV screen. You can create animations with sounds and music via the website and get them onto the building. Powering the display are 100,000 low-energy LED lights, installed into 330 windows on the south and west faces of the building. These lights can illuminate each window as a solid colour turning it into a tiny pixel that’s part of a giant display.
A narrow strip of ultra-bright LEDs were installed into every window frame along with a small controller box. The controllers connect to the central computer using existing CAT5 network cabling in the building – meaning the team didn’t need to install any additional wiring.
Peter Donegan will no doubt be glad to hear that the LEDs used are super-efficient. Each floor of the installation uses less energy than a standard kettle. Overall the lighting technology carried a tiny footprint, meaning it could be installed for a full two months before the project started without impacting the people that work there.
There’s a big team behind the project, born from a series of conversations and connections made in the Science Gallery. Originally inspired by the Blinkenlights installation in Berlin, Playhouse raises the technological bar with the ability to produce colour animations. SOme of the people involved include Adrián Acosta, Brian Fallon, founder of Daft,ie, Carina McGrail, Tim Redfern, Jack Phelan, Jonny McCauley and Ruaidhrí Devery from Fluid.ie.
You can find out all this over on the Playhouse website or follow the Playhouse project on twitter at http://www.twitter.com/playhousedublin
Here’s a look at what they did at Blinkenlights in Berlin:
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This looks deadly. I’m still a bit wary of trying to figure out the new software though.
And I hate to do this but it’s in me so I have to, but is the standard kettle line theirs or yours?, cause kettles were the standard image for bad energy use long before energy efficiency became a subject of interest. Almost 2 decades back when I first started working there were regular bans on 11 o’clock kettle boilings because it would mess up the electricity cause it used so much more energy than all the lights and computers put together.
This is so exciting. I’m afraid to download the software just yet cos I’ll get nothing done for playing with it!
I wonder do you know when your design will be up on the building? I’d hate to miss it if I’d put time into a design-I’d want to see it in all it’s glory
@BNGR - The standard kettle line is theirs, but I will check for you what they mean. Interesting one actually!
@Niamh - That’s also one of the things I need to find out!
that’s class!!! so doing that! loving the music!
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Don’t mind me, I was having an anorak moment.
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