ARCH
Client
A major oil & gas company
Sector
Energy · Carbon management
Location
Houston
Scope
Custom experiential room

You know a custom experiential room is working when the technology meshes with the environment to become one entity. The screens, the lighting, the display cases, the audio, and the holograms stop reading as equipment set into a room and start reading as the room itself.

Take the walkthrough — play with sound.

We built one that way for a major oil and gas company: a carbon-management exhibit in Houston, built around a life-size holographic figure standing inside a cylindrical display, ringed by styled structural columns. Walk in, and you meet your guide.

What it coordinates

What a custom experiential room actually coordinates.

The exhibit walks visitors through three chapters of the client’s story: what the science does, how far it scales, and the customers committing to it. None of it plays like a slideshow. Wide screens carry the establishing shots. A HoloTube carries the presenter, standing at full height, answering in real time. Lit cases hold physical samples staged to match the room instead of fighting it. Directional speakers aim sound at the audience instead of the whole floor. One show-control system cues all of it, so five separate systems behave as one.

Pull any single piece out and set it on a folding table, and it’s a gadget. Leave it where we built it, and it’s an environment.

How we do it

Built into the walls, not bolted to them.

The disappearing act starts on paper, long before install day. Displays get framed into the millwork instead of propped on stands. Case lighting gets plotted against the room’s full lighting plan, so the holograms sit at their brightest without a hot spot competing anywhere nearby.

Our HoloTube runs a 4K DirectVue image with no moving parts and no projector to babysit — the only reason a display can live flush inside a wall instead of parked in front of one. Cable runs and rack gear disappear into the same chases as the building’s own systems. Acoustics get tuned to the room’s real dimensions, not a generic preset. What’s left standing in the room is the story, not the rig.

We’ve built this way for NASA, Merck, and SLB, and the rule holds every time.

A display asks to be looked at. A room asks to be walked into.

Exhibitry — on designing for the built environment

Design for the second, and the equipment finally gets out of its own way.

4K
DirectVue holographic image — no projector, no moving parts
5 → 1
Five systems cued as one by a single show-control
Remote
Modular content, updated after the room opens
Holographic host
HoloTube — 4K DirectVue, flush-mounted, no moving parts
Coordinated systems
Wide screens, case lighting, lit sample cases, directional audio, holograms
Show control
One system cues all five subsystems as one
Integration
Framed into the millwork; cabling in the building’s own chases; acoustics tuned to the room
Content
Built in modules, updated remotely
Delivery
One team — hardware, software, and content — with the client’s architects and contractors from day one
FAQ

Frequently asked.

What separates a custom experiential room from a standard AV install?
Coordination, and a single source behind it. An AV install adds screens and speakers to a finished room, usually stitched together from several vendors after the fact. A custom experiential room is designed and built by one team — hardware, software, and interactive content together — working directly with the client’s own architects and contractors from day one.
Can the content change after the room opens?
Yes. Content is built in modules and updated remotely, so the room keeps pace with the story instead of freezing on opening day.

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