City Explorer at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital
Project Vision
As a child patient, the hospital can be scary and lonely. Decisions are made for and about you that you may not understand, by people you don’t know. In many cases you can be there for long periods of time. To help make that stay a little less scary, create a connection to the outside world and return a modicum of control, Potion created City Explorer for the new Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital.
Styled like a children’s book come to life, City Explorer is an interactive tour of New York that gives children the chance to visit eight classic locations around the city, and manipulate them using special powers. Control paintings at the MoMA or the signs in Times Square with telekinesis. Shape shift with animals at the Bronx Zoo. Fly around the Brooklyn Bridge or change the time of year in Central Park and even control the fireworks on the Fourth of July.
Using gesture control, Potion built a system that can accommodate up to six concurrent players without compromising the experience for users, whether fully able or wheelchair bound. To add a sense of personalization, the system is even integrated with the hospital’s child art program, allowing original art by patients to be brought into the world of the game in places like MoMA and Times Square.
Project Details
Design Team
Phillip Tiongson (principal, creative lead); Nikolai Soudek (director of production); Matthew McNerney (creative director); Stephanie Goralnick (art director); Veronica Lawlor (illustration, concept art); Cameron Browning (director of technology); Lindsey Andon, Keith Madden (producers); Tamar Ziv (lead developer); Luobin Wang, Tim Sun, Adnan Agha (developers); Cathy Sun, Edyta Lewicka (designers); Tori Bonagura (associate designer); Drew Radke, Nick MacDonald (production coordinators)
Project Area
180 sq ft
Consultants
Youtoocanwoo (music and sound design), Mirrortone Studios (sound design), Mental Canvas (Brooklyn Bridge environment)