Virtual Reality Centre, Cyberjaya, Malaysia
for Multimedia Development Corporation
Cyberjaya is a new information technology city being built in
Malaysia on a greenfield site of former rubber plantations, located
off the freeway between the new KL International Airport and KL
city.
Two levels of the 5 storey Enterprise 1 Building in Cyberjaya
have been set aside for the MDC’s Flagship Centre, a showcase
and research laboratories for Multimedia Development Corporation.
An important component of this complex is the Virtual Reality
Centre, a state-of-the-art, fully immersive virtual reality visualization
facility.
Egg-shaped, the virtual reality room accommodates 41 people.
The wider end of the egg accommodates the projection screen and
the narrow end the control console. The small theatre is raked
to optimize views of the screen.
The internal walls of the room are vertical and fitted with upholstered
panels for sound absorption. The external walls of the egg are
convex and are clad in translucent polycarbonate shingles that
are backlit. The egg from outside appears to glow and hum like
an alien UFO in the Flagship Centre space; and appears to be squashed
like a giant Swiss exercise ball sandwiched between the floors.
A separate entrance element, with a stair leading to double automatic
doors, provides access into the room. The ceiling around the outside
of the egg is recessed to give the illusion that the egg continues
up into the next floor. A reflective band around its base suggests
the egg continues down to the floor below.
Inside, 36 seats are fixed and 5 are movable Herman Miller Aeron
chairs. The centre of these is fitted with a U-shaped custom-designed
and built “fly-chair” apparatus with a joystick and
control panel which enables its occupier to control the VR system.
The fly chair apparatus is the only one of its kind in the world
and was designed by AS-B Arc.
The control console is a complex piece of joinery requiring integration
of IT cabling and equipment with the carcase. It is like a mini-building.
Flat screens are set down in a “trough” to permit
operators to view the screen over the top, and the whole console
is designed flexibly to accommodate the rapid changes to control
equipment over time.
Photography: John Gollings