Projected Image launch first-to-market warehouse model to transform safety planning
Specialists in projected safety signage – Projected Image – have launched an innovative virtual warehouse model to help businesses revolutionise safety planning.
Newcastle-based Projected Image – who have worked with big names including Coca-Cola and Mercedes-Benz – provide LED projectors that cast bright, hard-to-ignore health and safety signs onto any surface.
To help even more businesses simplify their health and safety signage, Projected Image have launched a cutting-edge tool which enables users to view projected signage solutions in a fully immersive virtual 3D environment.
“Safety is paramount in so many industries, but actually visualising how projected safety signage integrates into an existing workspace can be a challenge without an on-site demo. Our new interactive model gives companies the ability to virtually plan, test and perfect their signage before implementing it in real life, saving both time and resources” says Ian Spoors, Managing Director of Projected Image.
Designed to disrupt outdated industry norms, the model is a browser-native experience which uses modern web rendering technologies to deliver projected safety signage in an interactive, 3D environment, requiring no plugins and no downloads for instant access.
Built and optimised with performance-first principles, users can seamlessly navigate, pan and zoom through a warehouse simulation, exploring Projected Image’s signage solutions under dynamic conditions.
“This platform showcases our dedication to continuous improvement, leveraging new ideas and technology to solve real-world facility challenges and empower clients to make decisions and visualise how adaptive virtual signage can enhance safety and operational efficiency” says Cameron Melville, Project Lead and Head of Manufacturing at Projected Image.
The model can also demonstrate how signage will look under various lighting conditions and in relation to obstacles and hazards that can be present in real life scenarios.
The projected signage experts also say that the model is easy to use – with an interactive interface suitable for all technical proficiencies. Users can toggle between different signage systems, designs and lighting effects to address specific safety challenges and understand how Projected Image’s products work in action.
“Our model is a more engaging and practical way for clients to experience our products. Being able to see what projected signs look like in a dynamic environment will help to plan their health and safety signs and transform their signage solutions. It will not only simplify decision-making and planning, but it can help to test effectiveness and streamline safety assessments too” adds Ian.
Businesses in a range of industries – including food and drink, motor, logistics and warehousing – have recently adopted projected safety signage in their facilities.
Projected signs are a low-maintenance signage solution, providing vivid health and safety signs which don’t wear or fade for up to 50,000 hours – making them a safer, more cost-effective alternative to traditional signs.
“Projected signage is the next generation of safety signage, and our new model will make it even easier for businesses to make the switch from traditional painted or printed alternatives” concludes Ian.
Projected Image’s warehouse model can be found at: https://experience.projectedimage.com/
More information about Projected Image can be found at: https://www.projectedimage.com/