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Rainforest Cafe Floor Based Living Displays

London’s largest family restaurant, the Rainforest Cafe, has introduced a new level of interactivity to its immersive jungle experience with the introduction of two floor-based Living Displays, giving young guests a stunning opportunity to play with moving fish, leaves and frogs.

i-Sub Rainforest Cafe 1 [1]Described as ‘a place for discovery’, Rainforest Cafe offers an authentic tropical forest experience in the heart of London’s Piccadilly Circus. With animatronic elephants, gorillas, snakes and jaguars, a thunderstorm every 29 minutes, Amazonian foliage, live fish and of course rainforest-themed food, General Manager Brendan Lucey says he was ‘thrilled’ to install the Living Floor systems offered by i-Sub Digital Solutions [2].

Using an infrared tracking system, a video projector and a graphics PC running bespoke software, the Living Floor enables children and adults alike to fully interact with digital images, to play games and change the display with their hands and feet.

Lucey chose two systems for Rainforest Cafe, one placed at the foot of the steps down into the restaurant area, giving diners a glimpse of the forest floor – complete with shimmering leaves and Rainforest Cafe’s mascot, Cha! Cha! the red-eyed tree frog – as they arrive. On entering the projection area, the leaves blow around with the movement of feet, while frogs hop away. With guests surrounded by the flora, fauna and sounds of the rainforest, an authentic leafy floor completes the atmosphere.

A second Living Floor was fitted deeper into the ‘forest’ to create a ground-level fishpond. The digital fish, designed as replicas of the live fish in tanks around the restaurant, swim happily until the projection is walked over when they dash away.

The leaf floor and fish pool have been enormously popular with the thousands of guests hosted weekly by Rainforest Cafe since their installation ahead of the school holidays.

Simon Yandell, Sales and Marketing Manager of Rainforest Cafe London, said “People with young children have to tear them away from the Living Display to have dinner. It’s such a mind-blowing experience for them.”

The nature theme of the two Living Displays reflect Rainforest Cafe’s charity partnerships, with tropical bird care organisation the Society for Conservation of Aviculture and the Aspinall Foundation, an elephant and gorilla conservation charity. Working with the World Land Trust, Rainforest Cafe has also protected 3.2million sqm of Ecuadorian rainforest so far since 2001.