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Housed on Alfred Nobel's "wonderful sand desert" on the site of his British Dynamite Company, now accessed by the "Bridge of Scottish Invention", is a remarkable collection of technological exhibits integrated into a most innovative experience.
Housed on Alfred Nobel's "wonderful sand desert" on the site of his British Dynamite Company, now accessed by the "Bridge of Scottish Invention", is a remarkable collection of technological exhibits integrated into a most innovative experience.
The centre is equipped with an automated lecture theatre, with a Questron control system running a Sony S900 LCD video projector, and electric screen, a sound system and a voice re-enforcement system.
The whole exhibition is a dedication to the audacity of mankind and it's achievements.
DJW set up a video presentation, "The History of Explosions", in the main lecture theatre designed to compliment our motion-base installation. Vision is synchronised with audio, motion and special effects.
Visitors are led to believe they are entering a perfectly ordinary lecture theater for a video presentation, but as the show begins they see the surrounding floor lifting and they are then shaken, rocked and tilted in time to the story of explosives.