"There's no protection (of cultural heritage) if one doesn't have the capacity to involve different types of public in getting to know the heritage of our museum system," said Rome Superintendent for Cultural Heritage Claudio Parisi Presicce, at Wednesday's presentation of the experimental project. Rome's Councillor for Culture Giovanna Marinelli said, "Today we're speaking of the future because we're using technologies to widen enjoyment, to increase value, and to create continuity in the new generations". "This year we've counted 89,000 visits to the Museum of the Imperial Forums in Trajan's Market compared to 78,000 in all of 2014". "This is a high example, as will be the colouring of the Ara Pacis in the coming months, in which the scientific base melds with the capacity of technology to improve and simplify the enjoyment of places as complex as archaeological sites".
Mercoledì 14 Ottobre 2015, 16:41
03 Febbraio 2016, 07:48
(ANSA) - Rome, October 14 - The Museum of the Imperial
Forums in Trajan's Market on Wednesday introduced a new app as
part of an experimental two-month project called Glass Beacon
Museum, which will allow visitors to experience the museum
interactively through the use of augmented reality visors.
Through the project, Constantine, Trajan, Mars and Venus
tell their stories first-hand, and the marbles suddenly come to
life, bringing the visitor into a new dimension where he or she
can experience, rather than just see, their history, their
anecdotes, and other curiosities.
This unique and immersive visit is possible only at the
Museum of the Imperial Forums in Trajan's Market in Rome, thanks
to the experimental project "Glass Beacon Museum: The Museum of
the Future".
No longer audioguides to activate in front of a work, but
rather glasses of the latest technology that locate the visitor
within the museum and, based on his or her position,
automatically supply a wealth of information that goes well
beyond the description of what they're admiring.
In fact, the beacons - low-frequency Bluetooth nodes -
allow the visitor to be located, and the augmented reality
visors on the glasses integrate the components of a computer or
a smartphone for visualizing images, video, and 3D animations
that regard the cultural heritage on display in the museum.
This experience is possible for two months beginning
Wednesday and was made possible thanks to the Region of Lazio's
"Future Culture" grant, open to young creatives and aimed at the
realization of a hardware or software product with cross-media
characteristics for innovative enjoyment of content and cultural
events.
The versatility of the collection and the monumental
itineraries in the Museum of the Imperial Forums in Trajan's
Market offered fertile ground for storytelling and interaction
with the urban landscape.
The augmented reality virtual itinerary is made up of 14
different points of interest located between the first and
second floors and two external points, one on the first terrace
and the other on Via della Torre.
"There's no protection (of cultural heritage) if one doesn't have the capacity to involve different types of public in getting to know the heritage of our museum system," said Rome Superintendent for Cultural Heritage Claudio Parisi Presicce, at Wednesday's presentation of the experimental project. Rome's Councillor for Culture Giovanna Marinelli said, "Today we're speaking of the future because we're using technologies to widen enjoyment, to increase value, and to create continuity in the new generations". "This year we've counted 89,000 visits to the Museum of the Imperial Forums in Trajan's Market compared to 78,000 in all of 2014". "This is a high example, as will be the colouring of the Ara Pacis in the coming months, in which the scientific base melds with the capacity of technology to improve and simplify the enjoyment of places as complex as archaeological sites".
"There's no protection (of cultural heritage) if one doesn't have the capacity to involve different types of public in getting to know the heritage of our museum system," said Rome Superintendent for Cultural Heritage Claudio Parisi Presicce, at Wednesday's presentation of the experimental project. Rome's Councillor for Culture Giovanna Marinelli said, "Today we're speaking of the future because we're using technologies to widen enjoyment, to increase value, and to create continuity in the new generations". "This year we've counted 89,000 visits to the Museum of the Imperial Forums in Trajan's Market compared to 78,000 in all of 2014". "This is a high example, as will be the colouring of the Ara Pacis in the coming months, in which the scientific base melds with the capacity of technology to improve and simplify the enjoyment of places as complex as archaeological sites".















