Image Credit : The Australian
The Australian Jewish News
Project Overview
The Sir John Monash Centre is a state-of-the-art visitor's centre in Villers-Bretonneux, designed to commemorate Australia's role and sacrifice on the Western Front. The Department of Veteran Affairs undertook a lengthy tender process to find the best technology partners to help deliver an immersive and interactive experience at the $100m centre.
Project Commissioner
Project Creator
Team
Transpire (Technology Developer)
Department of Veteran Affairs (Project Commissioner)
Global Project Solutions (Project Managers)
Project Brief
Transpire were engaged to design, develop, test and deliver a BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) experience that incorporates a beacon network, smartphone application and bespoke IT solution.
Visitors will be able to download the Centre’s app to their smartphone (iOS or Android) and navigate the 487 square metre site at their own pace.
As they move through the Centre, 450 Bluetooth beacons will determine their location, prompting servers to launch video content to one of the nearest 450 screens and 10 projectors.
Audio will be delivered through the smartphone app in their chosen language to provide a more immersive experience.
Project Need
The project needed to help deliver an interactive experience, to help instill a sense of reflection, compassion and appreciation to sacrifice the Australian troops made 100 years ago to liberate the French town and change the tide of WW1.
A bluetooth network needed to be deployed and calibrated to best locate a user and display relevant content through the app and screens in the centre to them.
User Experience
Users were put at the core of the project, with extensive user testing conducted, and a push to make the app entirely functional to those with foreign language and accessibility needs.
Transpire used immense software engineering tuning that applied an algorithm to help devices users phones detect which beacon they should accept a signal from. The app will use a smartphone's geolocator to transmit accelerometer readings to determine whether the user is walking or static, and whether their device is in the palm of their hand, as opposed to their handbag or pocket - if the latter is the case, transmission can be turned off and capacity preserved.
The goal was to have the user interact as little as possible with their device, to ensure they remained present in the gallery to watch and learn about the experience 100 years ago.
Project Marketing
The launch of the centre on ANZAC Day 2018 received extensive media coverage in all mainstream and online media across Australia, and globally. The Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull was on-site to launch the centre to a group of dignitaries including HRH Prince Charles, and French Prime Minister Édouard Philippe.
Project Privacy
The app does not gather any personal information on users, and was built to be safe, secure and secure. Extensive penetration and user testing was conducted to ensure the integrity.
Digital - Government Services
The provision of timely government services has been transformed as applications and sites are developed and implemented to either replace or complement previous methods. Be it the delivery of current and up to date critical information, compliance, community support and engagement, notification and registration or providing greater accessibility to government resources.
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