Walt Disney Company uses Screen Goo in
creating "Magic Trees" for its 340 Disney Stores in the United States &
Europe
LOS ANGELES — The
Walt Disney Company, with the help of Steven P. Jobs and his
retailing team at Apple, intends to drastically overhaul its approach to
the shopping mall.
At a time when many retailers are still cutting back or approaching
strategic shifts with extreme caution, Disney is going the other way,
getting more aggressive and putting into motion an expensive and
ambitious floor-to-ceiling reboot of its 340 stores in the United States
and Europe — as well as opening new ones, including a potential flagship
in Times Square.
Disney Stores, which the media giant is considering rebranding
Imagination Park, will become more akin to cozy entertainment hubs. The
chain’s traditional approach of displaying row after row of toys and
apparel geared to Disney franchises will be given a high-tech makeover
and incorporated into a new array of recreational activities. The goal
is to make children clamor to visit the stores and stay longer, perhaps
bolstering sales as a result. Over the next five years, analysts
estimate that Disney will spend about $1 million a store to redecorate,
reorganize and install interactive technology.
Among the critical design elements of the
re-modeled stores are 13 foot tall “Magic Trees”. Finished with Screen
Goo Rear Projection coatings, these acrylic trees and their suitability
for displaying high quality projected images are a key component of the
interactive experience planned for the stores.
Please see the accompanying photos for what is just
one example of the almost limitless possibilities Screen Goo makes
available to architects and designers for incorporating projected images
into their designs in innovative and compelling ways
To read the whole article as it appeared in the New York Times on
October 12, 2009 please
click here -

Jim Fielding,
President of Disney Stores Worldwide, leading a tour, says, “It’s time
to take risks.”


