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Scoring the Goal

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NEC Displays, Projectors and Facial Recognition Technology Create Immersive, Personalized Experience at the National Soccer Hall of Fame

The Challenge

Revive and transform the National Soccer Hall of Fame from a traditional museum space into a high-tech experience for visitors and fans. To use technology that interacts with museum visitors and keep patrons engaged as they are immersed into museum displays

Solutions

To facilitate the custom and complex needs of The National Soccer Hall of Fame, the project required the full use of a wide variety of NEC Display products, including large format LCD displays, color-accurate desktop displays, touchscreens, laser projectors, and facial recognition technology from NEC Display’s sister company, NEC Corporation of America:

(4) NEC X551UHD 55-inch ultra-high-definition touch display

(4) NEC X651 UHD-2 65-inch LED-backlit ultra-high-definition professional-grade large screen displays

(3) X841UHD-2 84-inch LED-backlit ultra-high-definition professional-grade large screen display with TSi Shadow Sense Touch Overlay

(1) NEC X981UHD-2 98-inch LED-backlit ultra-high-definition touchscreen display with TSi Shadow Sense touch overlay

(9) NEC C431 42-inch thin-depth commercial displays

(6) NEC E232WMT-BK 23-inch multi-touch LED-backlit desktop monitor touchscreens

(4) NEC/PA322UHD-BK-2 32-inch ultra-high-definition color-accurate desktop displays

(2) NEC PX1005QL 10,000-lumen ultra-high-definition professional laser projector with NP31ZL lens

(7) NEC Express5800/R120g-1M facial recognition servers

NEC NeoFace facial recognition software

Result

Immersive museum exhibits, supported by a variety of technology, that lets fans of the sport create a personalized experience that changes every time they visit.

The competition for people’s time and attention is one of the greatest challenges museums face today, and that has driven many of these institutions to get creative with how they present their information and artifacts.

When a campaign to relocate the National Soccer Hall of Fame to a new location kicked off, stakeholders saw an opportunity to transform the museum from a traditional venue housing photos and trophies to a fully interactive, highly immersive, personalized experienced, backed by the latest technologies.

The Challenge

Originally located in Oneonta, New York, and opened in 1979, the National Soccer Hall of Fame housed iconic soccer memorabilia and served as home for Hall of Fame induction ceremonies – until the facility closed in February 2010.

“And that just didn’t sit right with my brother Clark and me,” said Dan Hunt, president of FC Dallas, an American Major League Soccer club based in Frisco, Texas. “Not just because of our dad, [Lamar Hunt, who was inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1982], but because there have been so many men and women who have contributed so much to the game of soccer. We wanted to revive the Hall of Fame and put it in a place where it could be successful.”

In 2013, the Hunt brothers, who co-own FC Dallas, launched a campaign to bring the Hall of Fame to Frisco and started initiating conversations with civic leaders. It was determined the project would be funded by a public-private partnership between FC Dallas, the city of Frisco, Frisco Independent School District and the U.S. Soccer Federation. However, part of the improvement involved reinstating the National Soccer Hall of Fame – not just reopening it, but completely reimagining it to be an immersive, high-tech experience that would draw fans of the sport to visit over and over.

The Design

To transform the National Soccer Hall of Fame into a personalized, interactive experience, in 2015, FC Dallas engaged two companies to design and create the exhibits: HealyKohler, a museum planning and exhibition design company, and Cortina Productions, a media design and production firm that specializes in location-based media for museums.

“The original museum used analog museum displays, but Dan Hunt felt passionately about using engaging media to help visitors feel how incredible American soccer is,” said Dan Kaplan, an interactive producer for Cortina.

Terence Healy, owner and design principal at HealyKohler, added that visitor participation was a major focus of the museum’s goals. “We asked: What are visitors’ expectations for the National Soccer Hall of Fame?” he said. “Because it’s a sports museum, you want a lot of activity and participation, and if you’re a sports fan, you like a little bit of competition.”

Cortina and HealyKohler designed a multi-technology museum experience that combined Sharp NEC Display Solutions digital displays and projectors, NEC Global’s NeoFace facial recognition and more.

“We created an experience where cameras can tell when a visitor is close to an exhibit, and the digital displays show personalized content to the visitor,” Dan Kaplan said. “As visitors walk through the Hall of Fame, they always see what’s most interesting to them.”

The Installation

When it came time to install, FC Dallas hired Capitol Museum Services (CMS), a full-service exhibit fabrication and AV installation company. While the design phase prepared the team as much as possible for the installation, there were still some challenges to overcome.

In addition to building the exhibit infrastructure, the design team had to create mockups to ensure correct positioning. Considerations during installation included thinking about how each person would be approaching the display or projected image in each exhibit area. Lighting in the environment and the amount of reflective materials in the exhibit areas played an important part in deciding how to position each piece of equipment, including displays, projectors, projection surfaces, and even the cameras driving some of the interactive features.

The Results

The museum experience begins in the Hall of Fame lobby, where visitors create a profile, answer questions about their favorite soccer teams, positions, and take a photo. This is used to personalize the experience as visitors move throughout the exhibit. Additionally, visitors’ scores from various games played throughout the museum, can be displayed on NEC digital displays throughout the day.

Motion-sensing cameras and virtual reality tech also allow visitors to juggle or kick a virtual ball into a goal, or reenact famous saves by players like Briana Scurry and Tim Howard, all played out on massive, ultra-high definition NEC displays like the NEC X981UHD-2.

Green screens allow visitors to place themselves into historic soccer photos, letting them celebrate wins with their favorite teams. Projection mapping technology using the NEC PX1005QL laser projector is featured in an exhibit that letting visitors design their own MLS jersey on an NEC touchscreen. The projectors map onto a manikin that shows what the jersey looks like, updating changes in real time.

Similarly, visitors can test their knowledge of soccer and even design their own soccer team scarfs using stations built around E232WMT touchscreen monitors, supported by PA322UHD color accurate displays to ensure scarfs look just the way guests like, and X551UHD displays for additional feedback and engagement.

“We really appreciated our opportunity to work with NEC – they were really helpful and always willing to work with us to figure out how we could put the experience together,” Dan Kaplan said.

The beautiful exhibit created with NEC displays and projectors is one of a three part process for engaging visitors. In addition to interacting with the exhibits, the museum also uses the NEC Global Neoface facial recognition system to welcome visitors and personalize the experience.

Feedback from visitors has been overwhelmingly positive. Furthermore, the museum industry itself has taken notice of how NEC’s products have impacted the Hall of Fame’s visitor experience. The American Alliance of Museums Media and Technology Network awarded the National Soccer Hall of Fame the 2019 Gold Muse Award for Research and Innovation for its “seamless interaction with content by removing many of the physical barriers often associated with usability while providing opportunities for meaningful, curated learning.”

“We want people to go in and have a positive experience, and have that experience live on with them,” Hunt said. “Whether it’s the digital experience or a great classic artifact like the gold medals or Women’s World Cup trophy, [the museum] is helping more people fall more in love with soccer.”

Hunt added that his team remains in touch with various divisions of NEC and plans to continue adding NEC technology to the museum and stadium.

“There’s not a week that goes by that we don’t have meetings or calls with them about new technology,” he said. “We have a plan to implement additional NEC products, so you will see more and more of an integration over the next three or four years.”