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UCL’s PEARL research facility employs L-Acoustics loudspeakers in an L-ISA Immersive Hyperreal Sound installation. (Photo Credit: Brad Kavanagh/Adlib)

L-Acoustics Helps University College London’s Environmental Research Laboratory To Recreate Everyday Life

L-ISA immersive system working with 150 loudspeakers to simulate real-life events in unique environment where entertainment technology meets scientific research.

University College London’s (UCL) new Person-Environment-Activity Research Laboratory (PEARL), a 4,000-square-meter, 10-meter-high laboratory and testing ground for simulating real-life events, is outfitted with 150 L-Acoustics loudspeakers in an L-ISA Immersive Hyperreal Sound installation to create a unique environment where entertainment technology meets scientific research.

UCL planned PEARL as a facility that enables the exploration of how humans interact with their environment by studying design effects on people. The UCL Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering’s vision is to use that facility to help create a world where everyone can achieve a better quality of life.

At 100 meters end-to-end and 40 meters across at its widest point — bigger than the floor area of Wembley Arena –the large experimental space can be divided into four modules. In it, researchers can create life-sized, controlled-condition environments such as a railway station or town square, so that they can study the crowd’s interaction with the environment and each other. The floor’s profile, type, and material can be changed, lighting can be of any hue and intensity, and different scents can waft through the air, all accompanied by multi-dimensional audio that reinforces the subtlest of aural cues to the loudest roar.

Photo Credit: Brad Kavanagh/Adlib

Engineering consulting firm Arup worked with UCL to define the range of technology that would deliver PEARL’s goal, particularly audio spatialization, and then find the partners that could deliver the project. Arup’s Tom Brickhill interfaced with L-Acoustics applications project manager and consultant liaison Julien Laval on the initial design concept.

“Being personally passionate about sound, and in particular the science of sound, I was incredibly eager to be involved in such a groundbreaking project, where entertainment technology serves academic purpose,” explains Laval. “Collaborating with Tom, I was drawn into the phenomenal design vision for PEARL. During the evaluation stage, it quickly became apparent that L-Acoustics product design philosophy and advanced technology in the area of immersive audio made it the perfect match for this project.”

With Brickhill traveling to Australia to work on another Arup project during the summer, Arup venue designer James Beer took over at PEARL. “We were pleased to initiate the relationship with L-Acoustics and Adlib, who then went on to win the competitive tender,” says Beer. “We are always looking to create engaging environments that people connect to, and here that meant that we needed a solution that could create diverse spatialization scenarios. From live audio stimuli that match an event to creating the atmosphere of a room or an outdoor soundscape, we needed the sounds to feel real and visceral. It could be a live source programmed in real-time through the L-ISA Processor, or it could be a plugin set layered on top of the live sound and played back into the space. Flexibility is at the forefront of everything PEARL does.”

Photo Credit: Brad Kavanagh/Adlib

PEARL is a mix of consultancy, AV, and research center. Responding to the design brief from Arup, event production and installation company Adlib was tasked with supplying the L-ISA technology, which is designed to reproduce any real-life situation the lab team at UCL can dream up.

Adlib pulled on its extensive experience in both the entertainment and installation markets to create a touring-grade audio system. Meanwhile, Chadwick professor of dngineering and director, UCL Centre for Transport Studies Nick Tyler put together an audio team, including technical services manager Joe Boxshall and Steve Mayo, specialist lead, sound, whose entertainment industry experience provided the right mix of competencies to be able to control audio content from preproduction to rendering, using a unified and turnkey immersive sound ecosystem.

“The only way for us to accomplish what PEARL needed was to design a precise and infinitely flexible, fully immersive sound system,” says Adlib project manager Andrew Watts. “L-ISA technology is tailor-made for this challenge because it provides the colossal dynamic range required, while also being easy to conceive, predict, and iterate with L-Acoustics Soundvision 3D audio design software.”

Adlib provided two spatial audio systems: an extensive system for the main experiment space and a smaller system for the preparation studio. “A fundamental concept of both spaces is that L-ISA can be set up in any configuration to meet the specific needs of a given experiment,” Watts continues. “L-Acoustics training, which was delivered this autumn, enables UCL to create immersive audio experiences from the design stage with Soundvision through to completion with the well-defined L-ISA workflow.”

Photo Credit: Brad Kavanagh/Adlib

Audio playback for both systems is provided by rackmount Mac Pros with Pro Tools and an Avid MTRX Studio interface, or Qlab and Dante Virtual Soundcard, which interfaces with Biamp Tesira servers via Dante. RME AVB Tools are used to interface between MADI and AVB for the L-ISA Processors. A total of 112 X8 and 24 A15 Wide cabinets are complemented by eight KS28 and 32 KS21 subwoofers. Amplification is provided by 28 LA2Xi, 14 LA4X and two LA12X amplified controllers.

“The sheer size of the facility and the flexible approach required for the different L-ISA loudspeaker arrangements led us to choose AVB for audio transport,” explains Watts. “This allowed us to design a system where an amplified controller could be connected to any AVB data or fiber point in the building and instantly connect to the audio racks without the need for analog or AES patchbays and tielines.”

The amplified racks can be positioned anywhere in the facility. As soon as an amplified controller is plugged in, it receives its AVB stream and is ready to go. Adlib designed and manufactured 82 flight cases specifically for this project to house all the L-Acoustics loudspeakers and amplified controllers.

The separate Sound Lab, dubbed “The Vibe,” has 16 L-Acoustics 5XT loudspeakers and two compact SB15m subs that staff can configure and test before moving into the large space when needed. A custom floor-standing structure for rigging loudspeakers is built around a workstation, which has a fiber-based KVM for control of a computer in the adjacent machine room with LA Network Manager and the L-ISA Processor. The Sound Lab’s control rack consists of five LA2Xi, a computer that can run DAWs, including ProTools, Reaper, or QLab, a DiGiCo SD9 console with L-ISA Controller for hands-on control, an L-ISA Processor, a configurable DSP server, two Milan-AVB interfaces, and a 48-port AVB and control switch.

Horticultural lighting fixtures are used to simulate daylight and sound field microphones allow for recording and measurement of sounds generated by participants to make the live space feel as close to the outside world as possible. UCL has already conducted a platform-train interface experiment for the Thameslink railway, re-creating a full-size train carriage and station platform to evaluate operating conditions. The team can also go on-site to measure a 3D soundscape, then return to PEARL to recreate these external environments using L-ISA technology.

“This is just the start of the relationship,” concludes Boxshall. “PEARL isn’t just a space for university research, it’s a simulation environment, so it has great commercial potential, too. We’re all incredibly excited to be part of such a groundbreaking project.”

L-Acoustics
Arup

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