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First Photos – Walgreen’s Spectacular In Times Square

DailyDOOH was kindly invited to the OFFICIAL launch last night of The Walgreen’s Spectacular [1] at 1 Times Square in NYC and I was quickly the first to volunteer to go cover the event!

The Walgreens spectacular covers 17,000 square feet, sits 15 feet off the ground and rises 340 feet into the air.

Within the sign are 13 interconnected plasma screens displaying coordinated, dynamic content. A device called the TrueElement Control System is the proprietary backbone powering all of D3’s LED displays.

The LEDs use a color-theory based diode placement array and special processing algorithms to maximize color output and brightness – this translates into every single diode in the LED array being able to display the full 16-bits of color data.

In order to synchronize the system, the Walgreens spectacular runs off 30 computers. Looking internally from one module to the next, there are 16.6 miles of cable, 6.5 miles of steel tubing end to end and half a million nuts, bolts and screws that hold the structure together!

The display contains 77 cabinets and the sign consumes 30 percent of the power originally calculated (about 1 megawatt)

Although this now sign claims to hold the title of ‘largest and most advanced‘ I am not so sure I necessarily agree.

For example, it is indeed taller than, say the NASDAQ sign (shown below) but the Walgreens looks more like a racing stripe than a full-on display (like the NASDAQ) AND I am not convinced either that it surpasses the latter in surface area either.

Compare and judge for yourself as we show them side by side…

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We also have a few short video clips up on Vimeo…

East Facade – LAUNCH of Walgreen’s Spectacular in Times Square [4] from manolo [5] on Vimeo [6].

Walgreen’s spectactular – Street Level Views [7] from manolo [5] on Vimeo [6].

Quick facts:

2 Comments (Open | Close)

2 Comments To "First Photos – Walgreen’s Spectacular In Times Square"

#1 Comment By Bryan Crotaz On 21 November 2008 @ 13:20 @597

Manolo –

I can’t see in your videos where the 13 plasmas are – how are they integrated into the LED so seamlessly?

Bryan

#2 Comment By Manolo Almagro On 21 November 2008 @ 18:59 @832

Hi Bryan – sorry I didn’t have a wide-angle lens, the sign is so tall I had to stand across the street and 1/4 of the way down the block to capture the entire image. However- I couldn’t get the base of the building (which is where the plasmas are) but you can get a better look at my photostream on flickr if you’d like to see the plasmas, (toward the end of the stream)

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