Sunday, August 18, 2013

Holiday Signs Helps People Find Their Way






ROANOKE REGIONAL AIRPORT:

WAYFINDING SIGNAGE


Lionberger Construction of Roanoke, Virginia chose Holiday Signs to provide the wayfinding signs for the Roanoke Regional Airport Improvements Project in Roanoke. Airport official Sherry Wallace said one of the biggest issues of their passengers was not being able to find the restrooms. The estimated $3.1 million renovation project included provisions for new terminal and gate directional signage, including improved wayfinding for restroom areas.


In addition to working closely with our client, Lionberger Construction, the Holiday Signs design, production, and installation teams interfaced with architects from Baker Inc., and wayfinding consultants from Valancourt International to provide new and improved signage that enhanced the renovated spaces at the airport while at the same time resolved old problems air travelers had with finding their way around.


The project consisted of an all- aluminum system with custom brushed finishes. The ceiling mounted signs in the terminal required special equipment for installation due to the height above the floor level. Each sign type comprising the new system was prototyped and reviewed prior to construction in Richmond. Several recommendations for design improvements were suggested by Holiday Signs and worked into the final project. Signs were designed in strict accordance with ADA and FAA guidelines. Full-size scaled templates of every sign were prepared prior to final production for approval of typefaces, letter heights, spacing, wording by the wayfinding consultant and architect.

One of the biggest challenges was the timing of the project. The airport management team had well-defined completion goals. Holiday Signs
effectively coordinated design, prototypes, fabrication, security clearances for workers and final installation within very strict phasing time frames. This phase of a multi-phase renovation project began last summer and is in the final stages of completion.


Contact: Mark Hackley, Account Executive mhackley@holidaysigns.com (540)416-3154

Photography by RRA


Wayfinding Airports Facilities Signage Roanoke Regional Airport Sign Design Virginia Directions













Thursday, June 6, 2013

DOMINION ENTERPRISES CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS HIGH-RISE BRANDING SIGNAGE




Corporate Identity By Day

Dominion Enterprises, based in Norfolk, Virginia, USA, moved into a new high-rise building in downtown Norfolk and needed to brand it and make a 24/7 statement for the corporate headquarters. Holiday Signs was selected as the sign contractor for the project because of our technical expertise with signage for high-rise applications.

One critical and overlooked aspect of any high-rise project is the impact of design on the future costs of sign maintenance and repair. The design and manufacture of signs installed at high elevations is significantly different than signs installed at ground level. Issues of strength, structural integrity, illumination, visibility, reliability and serviceability are all magnified due to higher wind loads, tougher service environment, much greater viewing distance and limited or significantly more difficult access to both front and rear of the sign. Even more import- antly, signs installed at a companys headquarters become a symbol of the company itself and require the boldest designs, best construction and reliable performance to make the appropriate  statement  high  above  the  city.

Considering all  this,  Holiday  Signs  proposed a solution for effective corporate identity signs at this location including provisions for efficient maintenance. When the architect and general contractor compared our proposal with another, they liked that our approach used LED lighting and accessible power supplies while the other recommended a neon lighting  system  with  transformers installed inside the letters. Not only was neon a bad choice for overall power consumption, but reliability and maintenance concerns stemming from a neon system far exceeded the excessive power costs.

 
Corporate Identity at Night

Another important element of our solution that set us apart was that we recommended gray and red as the daytime colors of choice considering the building colors and achievement of the best possible contrast. Then we suggested a 3M Dual Color film for the face material so the logo  would  shine  white during the night. The competing firm proposed all white graphics for both day and night and the contrast of the white letters against the light-colored cast stone walls of the building would have provided a very weak projection of the companys corporate identity during the daytime.

To ensure the finished product did its job, we prepared prototype models of the lettering prior to final production with three levels of lighting: one was as specified in the design drawings engineered by others; another was what we recommended for lighting; and a third was a sample halfway in between one and two. By presenting actual lighted samples  at nighttime on the wall 32 stories high to the CEO, CFO and other Dominion executives, we showed them without a doubt how to best illuminate their image.