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![]() Digital Outdoor Expands in Public Space
By Louis M Brill
In an effort to understand this developing market, several prominent outdoor digital players from both a manufacturing level and an advertising level have emerged turning dynamic digital street furniture programs into urban cityscapes.
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Yesco Electronics
In doing so, YESCO has recently acquired access to a pre-existing LCD screen and is re-engineering it to be known as the YESCO Suncutter LCD, a rugged, outdoor, daylight visible display for bus shelter and other street furniture products in that market. Bob Klausmeier, Director of New Business Development from YESCO Electronics LLC (Logan, UT), noted that YESCO has had a tremendous success with digital billboards where enough demand for that product required them to build a separate factory for fabricating and providing digital billboards to the outdoor advertising community. "Clearly there is a strong business model as well for outdoor LCD signage, and the LCD component is something that our larger customers have requested. Our YESCO Electronics solution is to offer a very robust outdoor LCD display that is daylight readable, and can be integrated into any existing bus shelter or other appropriate street furniture application, such train and bus platforms, newsstands, etc."
"Our LCD screen is HD ready at 1080 and scalable, depending on its outdoor application. The Suncutter comes in several sizes including a 40-inch diagonal screen, a 46-inch diagonal screen, a 55-inch diagonal screen and a 70-inch diagonal screen. An important feature of the Suncutter is that its outdoor LCD Display comes with easily replaceable backlighting lamps so that you can maintain a sunlight viewable brightness of 2000 nits throughout the life of your LCD Display." "As for ambient environmental concerns, our LCD screens are placed inside of a waterproof cabinet. To deal with extreme heat," noted Klausmeier, "the YESCO cabinet employs a forced air solution that allows the LCD to stay well within the manufacturer's operational temperature ranges even while the LCD is in direct sunlight. To further protect the Suncutter screens, along with the ruggedized cabinets the LCD is shielded by vandal proof and graffiti resistant protective glass." "Integrating digital displays into street furniture is a new market," says Klausmeier, who summed up the YESCO LCD program by noting that "outdoor advertising companies who have existing street furniture programs see digital signage as a practical transition into select street furniture products within the next year or so."
Outdoor Promotions
Outdoor Promotions evolving bus shelter program was discussed by Ginny Deitchler, V.P. Sales & Marketing. "By 2006, Outdoor Promotions was already successfully involved with our bus shelter program when we won the bid to manage the Las Vegas Strip bus shelters. We were already aware of digital displays for bus shelters and saw that as a wave of the future." "In taking over the Las Vegas Strip bus shelter program, we planned for a digital display component that would be a high definition, full color, and full motion, with full sound digital screen to be an advertising feature of the bus shelter. We believe at that time we were one of the first companies in the United States or for a matter of fact, the world to implement this kind of a program." "We began by specifically designing the digital display units," noted Deitchler, "to function in an outdoor environment and could deal with everything from potential vandalism to the extreme weather condition of Las Vegas that it would subjected to. In developing this system, we refer to it as the Digital Advertising Network (DAN), which went live in Las Vegas in the summer of 2010." Las Vegas was a prime market to introduce our digital display bus shelters because of its high volume pedestrian and vehicular traffic. A recent 2009 market study by Applied Analysis (Las Vegas, NV) determined that on a daily basis pedestrian visitations to Las Vegas averaged an hourly count of at least 17,000 tourists on The Strip. The study also estimated a peak nightly Strip attendance of at last 40,000 tourists an hour. With this attendance volume of tourists, it made Las Vegas a natural advertising environment to establish a digital bus shelter deployment and attractive to national and local advertisers." Outdoor Promotions overall Las Vegas bus shelter program consists of approximately 2,800 advertising panels. Because of Las Vegas's world-class attraction as a destination with its tremendous daily pedestrian and vehicular traffic, it became the perfect location for Outdoor Promotions to initial a digital street furniture program. "Our inventory on The Strip is a combination of digital and static panels, noted Deitchler. "We added the digital because of the cutting edge technology of full motion with audio." "It would appeal to certain brands as well as the flexibility for short term convention targeted campaigns." The company began this program by installing 15 high profile digital displays, all located on bus shelters along the Las Vegas Blvd (The Strip) traffic corridor. As for the network's content stated Deitchler, "We are pure advertising…no weather, news, etc. We opted for 100% advertising because of the mindset of a visitor and the average bus riders dwell time being 9 minutes as they wait for the Deuce bus which travels along The Strip. Thus our advertising is focused Strip opportunities on where to shop, where to get tickets for shows; and where to have a nice dinner or be entertained with a branding product ad."
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For the initial outlay of the Outdoor Promotion digital display inventory, eight of them are LCD displays, and the remaining seven, LED displays. The LED screens were placed on the locations that have more exposure to vehicle traffic as the visibility is better since they are much brighter. We went with the LCD for the screens that are oriented for a majority of pedestrian traffic as they are "higher definition" for the close up viewing. "The LCD display component is composed of a 70-inch screen in a portrait format, integrated into ten appropriate bus shelters near specific hotel bus stops. The displays are daylight readable, each with a nit rating of 2000, though in the summer", stated Randy Baker, Operations Manager of Outdoor Promotions. "This setting automatically drops down to as low as 1200 nits to reduce the amount of heat generation. The display screen is a sub-component encased in a steel box that is bolted to the shelter. To protect the display component from the Las Vegas summer (where temps are known to average out at around 110 degrees on a daily basis) each screen is cooled with as many as 17 fans drawing air thru the unit to displace the heat build-up." Outdoor Promotions remaining five LED displays are fitted out as a full panel (70-inch diagonal) on the side of the bus shelter facing street traffic. Each screen has a 6 mm pitch, with a brightness level in a range from 1500 to 2000 nits - not to exceed 2000 nits. ?These screens are also encased in a steel box that is bolted to the shelter. A thick piece of plastic on the front of the unit protects it from vandalism. For temperature control, there are 10 fans that draw air thru the unit to displace the heat build-up. "In full system integration, Outdoor Promotions handles all aspects of the Las Vegas bus shelter program," stated Baker, "as we fabricate the digital display as a sub system and install both the bus shelters and the digital displays into them. We also maintain and service the bus shelters on a daily basis and as expected, book all the advertising and operate this digital network on an ongoing basis.
Time Square street side digital displays
"The newsstands are modern, stainless steel and glass structures whose front end is open to allow its operator to interface with the public. On the backside of the news stand four LCD displays (HD 1080p screens from Display Devices Inc.), each with a 65-inch diagonal, have been installed in a two x two landscape configuration, creating a six by ten-foot panoramic back panel. Additionally one 70-inch LCD display has also been installed on one side of the newsstand in a portrait orientation." "A total of eight CEMUSA newsstands are part of the digital display network. The scope of SHOW + TELL's work included architecting the system that distributes the content to the eight news stands, overseeing the retrofit of the digital components into the existing structures, designing and producing all non-advertising content, as well as providing ongoing technical operations, support and content management for the CEMUSA newsstand digital display network." "The LCD screens we used were specified for outdoor use (e.g., daylight readable), each with an overall brightness level between 1500 - 2000 nits. For protection against graffiti, each LCD screen was installed behind vandal-proof glass." "The news stand's digital content runs in an eight-minute loop with a play list that is targeted to Times Square's changing crowds. The network is a 50/50 mix of third-party advertising (including hyper-local advertising for events in the Times Square area), and dynamically driven informational spots -- real-time transit info, news, sports, weather, and entertainment art moments, highlights/promos for art institutions. And in the foreseeable future, the CEMUSA newsstands will present opportunities to engage Times Square audiences through interactive content. With its day-parting ability, we can adjust the schedule to target office workers during the day and more tourist-oriented mix in the evenings and weekends." CEMUSA's digital display network is changing the landscape of Times Square. Now newsstands are not only selling magazines, sodas and concessions, but also acting as a hub for real-time news, information and video advertising. The people in Times Square no longer have to look up to be dazzled.
From baby steps Deitchler also noted there are very few United States cities that have these kinds of heavy audience volumes other than Las Vegas and Times Square. However, there are still other American cities with unique destinations attracting large audiences or creating temporary audience surges that would warrant some degree of digital street furniture within that particular cityscape. For outdoor advertisers, this is all good news, and for other soon-to-be digital street furniture programs, 'the day is young...'
Louis M. Brill is a journalist and consultant for high-tech entertainment and media communications. He can be reached at (415) 664-0694 or louisbrill@sbcglobal.net
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