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Audio Spotlight Directional Sound is the Essential Feature Inside The Listening Booth in England’s Exeter Library

In southwestern England, Holosonics' Audio Spotlight directional sound technology is the essential feature of The Listening Booth in the Exeter Library.

Listening booth image
A patron at the Exeter Library enjoys The Listening Booth, which features Audio Spotlight directional sound technology.

In southwestern England, Holosonics’ Audio Spotlight directional sound technology is the essential feature of The Listening Booth in the Exeter Library where people with visual impairments can hear written words and sounds that engage users with the sonic environment, while the surrounding space remains peacefully quiet for all other patrons nearby.

The booth, which has no walls, is an open-ended wooden structure with seating for two that utilizes a forward-facing Audio Spotlight AS-16i directional speaker to play audio that only those seated inside it can hear, with no sound bleed affecting nearby areas of the library. The booth, which uses infrared sensors to detect when someone enters it, was designed to offer library goers with compromised sight an alternative to engage with literature, periodicals, and other audio content provided by the library.

When a visitor enters the booth, the Audio Spotlight speaker plays a welcoming message and then offers a menu of audio that can be chosen using specially-designed tactile buttons. Audio Spotlight’s revolutionary directional sound technology was the perfect fit for the booth, which is expected to be taken on tour to other libraries throughout southern England in the future.

“I found the AS-16i easy to set up and install, and was really impressed with how directional the sound was,” said Hugh McCann, the artist who designed the booth. “Working in a library meant the audio had to be really tight yet clear, and the Audio Spotlight was certainly up to the job.”

The Listening Booth was created by English artist Hugh McCann, with support from various groups including the Arts Council England, Libraries Unlimited, and the Exeter City Council. By utilizing Audio Spotlight technology, the booth met the challenge of producing a narrow beam of sound that can’t be heard by anyone even just a step or two away from the structure. With consultation from students at the WESC Foundation, a specialist center for the visually impaired, the Listening Booth was manufactured by Knowle West Media Studio: The Factory.

By implementing the booth, the library now provides visually impaired people a source for learning and entertainment that other traditional libraries in the region do not offer. Each month, four new pieces of audio are programmed into the booth, including stories and articles produced by local writers and classic poems read by local school children

Contact us to learn more about how our directional sound technology can benefit your projects in the same way it has enhanced the experience for patrons at the Exeter Library as well as a wide variety of other settings that include museums, hospitals, airports, and many other locations throughout the world.

Audio Spotlight in Action
Audio Spotlight is a revolutionary audio technology that creates sound in a narrow beam, just like light. Aim the flat, thin speaker panel to your desired listening area, and provide all of the sound and none of the noise.™ From museums, exhibits, and digital signage to retail stores and special projects, hundreds of companies have chosen this patented technology to provide high-quality, precisely controlled sound, while preserving the quiet.™

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