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Designed to Deliver

The concept of multi-use event spaces has been trending for quite some time now. A major aspect of this concept is guest experience: providing customers with an enjoyable and memorable journey from ticket purchase to parking to wayfinding to concessions to the event itself. Today's audiences have high expectations.

They want comfortable seats; state of the art sound; sharp lighting and crystal-clear projections. Fans today are buying much more than just a seat at a sporting event or concert.

The "more" mindset carries over into just about everything these days. Earlier this year, we purchased pens to give away at a trade show. They're not just pens, though. There's a ballpoint tip on one end and the other end is a touchscreen stylus.

Users can remove the stylus to reveal a reversible flat head/Phillips bit. The barrel of the pen features a built-in bubble level, and is also marked so they can use it as a 3" standard ruler or as a 7cm metric ruler.

Just like no one wants a plain old pen -- you can get one of those anywhere -- people aren't drawn to single-purpose venues.

Folks today want a space that's easily accessible with enhanced capabilities for a tailor-made guest experience. This is what "more" looks like in today's arena: Metallica - The San Francisco Symphony - Dave Matthews Band - Eric Clapton - Bon Iver - Elton John - John Mayer - Mumford & Sons - Janet Jackson - WWE Monday Night Raw/Smackdown Live - Eric Church - 40+ Golden State Warriors home games - Thrive City Farmer's Market - Trevor Noah - Andrea Bocelli - Cher - Esports Night.

Throw in some two-dozen restaurants and retail spaces, public parks and public art along the waterfront, and you've got yourself a destination. If people are willing to spend their time at your venue, chances are they're willing to spend their money there, too. Expanding your revenue stream with that type of variety begs the question -- how do you keep up with it?

"I don't have exact numbers," says Bob Powers, head rigger at Chase Center. "But I guarantee it's faster to hang a show with a SkyDeck."

Chase Center boasts a 49,860 sq. ft. rigging grid. 12,000+ square feet of the grid is filled with patented SkyDeck tension wire grid by IA Stage, Inc.

This technology helps facilitate the smooth transition between the shows that make up Chase Center's busy schedule.

The SkyDeck tension grid at Chase Center is comprised of 188 modular steel panels, strung with aircraft cable woven on 2" centers to form a mesh working surface.

Designed to handle the wide range of events hosted at the arena, Chase Center's SkyDeck features a 2" x2" hybrid steel frame, specifically engineered for very low weight-to-strength ratio, and has a live load capacity of 20lb per sq. ft. The design incorporates 6" grid wells, making it easy to wrap beams without compromising riggers' safety.

For those who need something stronger, IA Stage also manufactures SkyDeck II, which is catwalk-rated and has a live load capacity of 50lb per square foot. Little Caesars Arena in Detroit has a SkyDeck II measuring over 35,000 sq. ft.

Powers explains that the emphasis on keeping up the speed of changeovers between shows is not about cutting labor or taking shortcuts. It's about meeting the demands of modern audiences safely.

He says, "Is it faster? Absolutely. Is it easier? Absolutely. But safety is the real game changer."

Shortly after the venue opened in 2019, Chase Center's crew hung Ariana Grande's 24 truck, 148-point show in two hours and 28 minutes. That's roughly two rigging points per minute. They loaded out that same show in two hours and 19 minutes, with zero injuries and zero accidents.

Powers added, "It's like safety belts. By not using one, you're choosing to expose yourself to a risk that's just not necessary." And that is exactly what SkyDeck was developed for -- to eliminate falling, the #1 risk of the entertainment industry.

WWWiastage.com


(19 June 2020)

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