How a Norwegian Infrastructure Project is Using Virtual Reality to Improve Public Buy-In

Subscriber Access

This article was originally published by Aurodesk's Redshift publication as "Norwegian Rail Project Adopts Immersive Design for Public Engagement and Buy-in."

For a disruptive, 10-kilometer-long rail project that won’t even break ground until 2019, public officials and local residents of Moss, just south of Oslo, Norway, have been given an unusually vivid preview that, in the past, only the designers would have seen at this stage.

“We set up a showroom in the city where the public can come to view the project in a theater setting, and the feedback has been quite nice,” says Hans Petter Sjøen, facility management coordinator for Bane NOR, the year-old, state-owned company responsible for developing, operating, and maintaining the Norwegian national railway infrastructure. “Project members also have been receptive. They tell us that they have seen dimensions on the big screen that they did not see in person.”

Content Loader
About this author
Cite: Rob McManamy. "How a Norwegian Infrastructure Project is Using Virtual Reality to Improve Public Buy-In" 29 Oct 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/882527/how-a-norwegian-infrastructure-project-is-using-virtual-reality-to-improve-public-buy-in> ISSN 0719-8884

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.