design awards
GOLD AWARD
Category: Experiential Exhibit Exhibitor: Garden of Life Design/Fabrication: 3D Exhibits Inc., Schaumburg, IL, 800-471-9617, www.3dexhibits.com Fabrication: Ravenswood Studio Inc., Lincolnwood, IL, 847-679-2800, www.ravenswoodstudio.com Show: Natural Products Expo West, 2015 Budget: $80,000 – $149,000 Size: 20-by-40 feet
PHOTOS: Padgett and Company Inc.; Garden of Life
Enchanted Garden
At its core, an exhibit is a pint-sized theme park for the brand it represents, a place where every detail is meticulously selected to communicate something about the company. But the designers at Schaumburg, IL-based 3D Exhibits Inc. took that notion literally when designing this exhibit for Garden of Life. To communicate to attendees at Natural Products Expo West that the maker of sustainably grown health products was rooted in the ethics of organic farming, 3D Exhibits transformed the 20-by-40-foot swath of show-floor concrete into a garden plot.
Hive of Activity
Garden of Life had approached its exhibit designers with a peculiar request: Re-create the look of "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids" into a larger-than-life garden scape. Designers delivered via supersized props and playful details from the floor to the rigging that charmed Exhibit Design Awards judges. "This one takes the top honors for whimsy," one judge said.Bees and their role in pollination are at the epicenter of organic farming. So Garden of Life perched a supersized replica of a honeybee with a nearly 4-foot wingspan atop its 20-by-40-foot exhibit. Additionally, booth staffers wore branded T-shirts that related to elements in the organic-farming process with cheeky sayings. For example, one staffer was assigned "compost," and accompanying text on her shirt read "Let's break it down. Ya dig?" A rotating, 10-foot-diameter sun-like structure, created from tensioned fabric and emblazoned with the Garden of Life logo, seemingly cast golden rays down upon the booth, and a pair of blue-gray, tensioned-fabric clouds completed the sky scape. Meanwhile, a 13-foot-tall spade and rake set emerged from the convention center floor. But the exhibit's fantastical form didn't inhibit its function. The interior of the 14-foot-tall watering can doubled as a secluded conference room, and four informal seating areas, comprising stump-like stools and glass-topped terra-cotta pots, were used for impromptu meetings. The process of creating Garden of Life's exhibit wasn't all that different from growing sustainable produce. The company planted the seed of an idea, which was nurtured by designers until it bloomed into a brand-appropriate booth where the company could truly flourish.
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TOPICS Measurement & Budgeting Planning & Execution Marketing & Promotion Events & Venues Personal & Career Exhibits & Experiences International Exhibiting Resources for Rookies Research & Resources |
MAGAZINE Subscribe Today! Renew Subscription Update Address Digital Downloads Newsletters Advertise |
FIND IT Exhibit & Display Producers Products & Services All Companies Get Listed |
EXHIBITORLIVE Sessions Certification Exhibit Hall Exhibit at the Show Registration |
ETRAK Sessions Certification F.A.Q. Registration |
EDUCATION WEEK Overview Sessions Hotel Registration |
CERTIFICATION The Program Steps to Certification Faculty and Staff Enroll in CTSM Submit Quiz Answers My CTSM |
AWARDS Sizzle Awards Exhibit Design Awards Portable/Modular Awards Corporate Event Awards Centers of Excellence |
NEWS Associations/Press Awards Company News International New Products People Shows & Events Venues & Destinations EXHIBITOR News |
||||||||||||||||||||
|