By Judith Rubin, InPark Editor
Not too many years ago it was common shorthand to just say “IAAPA” in reference to the annual show in North America, but now that there’s a hefty global structure and three annual Expos firmly in place, we distinguish the association from its events, and call the Orlando gathering the IAE.
IAE is a vast universe with various, overlapping quadrants whose organization reflects the evolving industry. When the Themed Entertainment Association (TEA) was founded in 1994, for instance, it helped galvanize the creation of a High Tech area, enabling certain categories of exhibitors and members to find one another more readily.
Today the TEA booth at IAE functions as a node for its particular niche of the attractions industry and a platform for TEA business including announcing the annual slate of Thea Awards recipients. The Nov 15 Theas announcement, delivered as usual to a full house, was read by David Willrich of DJ Willrich Ltd., who would, on Nov 16 officially become the new TEA International Board President, succeeding Steve Birket of Birket Engineering who held the office for two years.
One aisle over was InPark’s booth. We have learned from the community we serve that a themed environment is a conversation starter, so we always have a touch of theming in our booth – this year it was Yoga, and delegates were invited to lie down on our mats and stretch if they felt the call, or use one of our handy massage tools.
And so, the stage was set for dialog and discussion in our quadrant of the IAE universe. Whether in the snug setting of the InPark booth, roaming the floor, attending mixers after hours, or out and about in Orlando with the ever-present Orlando Eye a reminder of our industry and our mission – we tried to tune into the buzz, identify the flavor, take the temperature of things. IAE Orlando is the year-end time for summarizing, so here are some IPM takeaways with links to more:
The museum community is present in ever larger numbers. There has always been a lot of movement between the theme park sector and the museum sector in terms of designers, suppliers and media producers. From certain viewpoints the markets have a great deal in common, in terms of target audience, competition with in-home leisure options, tourism and travel tie-ins, and of course the supplier community that serves them. There are similar parallels with zoos and aquariums, and as a result, a great deal of outreach and dialog between the sectors takes place.
IAAPA devotes a good chunk of conference time to museums, zoos and aquariums. TEA Thea Award recipients cover all these areas, and TEA expanded its annual TEA/AECOM Theme Index to include a Museum Index several years ago. Everyone benefits from the shared wisdom, and the buyer mix one encounters on the floor is more diverse. (See IPM issue #61, Museums & Expanding Markets; IPM issue #64, Waterparks, Zoos & Aquariums.)
Flying attractions continue to gather momentum. Numerous ride manufacturers have competitive flying theater systems on the market today, and from conversations on the floor at the IAAPA Attractions Expo this year with media producers, attraction producers, manufacturers and operators, the trend is still going at full speed. These large, specialty theaters combine motion simulation and cinema to immerse guests into an experience of flying over a landscape or through a storytelling environment. Ever since the first Soarin’ opened at Disney’s California Adventure in the early 1990s, flying attractions have been taking off around the world. They are embraced by destination tourism operators and by theme parks as top guest draws. InPark has been at the forefront of industry reporting on this unique ride concept. (See “Flying High” and “Ride Systems of Flying Theaters” from InPark Issue #62, and “The next generation of immersive attractions” from Issue #51.)
Show control is the new black. Or is it the secret sauce? Or the lifeblood of attractions? Technically speaking, of course. We know storytelling is king, but show control and technical integration are what turns a pile of gear into a storytelling delivery system. Show control is what makes one black box talk to another black box, what drives seamlessness and synchronization and cues, what makes it possible for systems to be very sophisticated and complex, yet simple to operate. Show control specialists can speak the language of IT, which is an increasingly valuable trait as parks and other venues adopt enterprise systems. (See “Isaac Takes Control,” “Barco acquires Medialon,” “Alcorn McBride RidePlayer,” “InfoComm and the annual Geekout.”)
What went on in your quadrant of the IAAPA Attractions Expo?