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Navy Pier
Transformed for Winter WonderFest
During
the holiday season CSSI transformed Navy Pier's Festival Hall into
a 90,000-square-feet magical winter wonderland. CSSI Designer Tom
Ryan worked closely with Navy Pier's Directors of Special Events
and Entertainment, along with Gail Steffen, Director of Convention
Services, to bring General Manager Jon Clay's spectacular vision
to life.
Project Managers
Ross Hamilton and Rick Boultinghouse began working on the project
in February 2000 and had to keep the project on track through several
rounds of redesigns before the final concept was chosen. Joy Holden
was the assistant project manger and Joe Strange acted as job lead
on the project. CSSI provided the overall supervision during installation
and made sure the project was completed on time and on budget.
Winter
WonderFest glittered under the 20,000 icicle lights that CSSI provided.
In order to cover the whole hall with a canopy of lights, six-foot-wide
swags were joined into hundred-foot sections and strung across the
ceiling. CSSI also decked the halls with over 500 lit trees. Sponsors
and foreign consulates decorated 60 trees with themed ornaments
and an enormous 42-foot-tall tree was decorated by a CSSI crew and
placed in the center of the hall to delight visitors.
In only its
first year, Winter WonderFest featured tons of activities, games,
and entertainment for young and old alike. The Main Performance
Stage, sporting a lit gazebo roof, was loaded with Pier performers
that entertained guests with Christmas carols, puppet shows, and
other live performances.
The
Pier set up a story-telling stage and craft area where children
could decorate cookies, and make ornaments, puppets, and New Year's
Eve hats. Kids could test their skills on huge inflatable climbing
walls, obstacle courses and a giant slide, as well as riding the
Reindeer Express, a trackless electronic train that took kids and
parents around the event. Another special activity for kids was
visiting Santa's Village, where Santa greeted kids at his enormous
gingerbread house.
But perhaps
the coolest part of the event was the Arctic Ice Rink. The rink,
measuring 124-feet-long and 70-feet-wide, had plenty of room for
kids and adults to skate up a storm.
The wildly popular
event drew in more than three times the number of guests the Pier
had projected and the Pier and CSSI are already planning an even
bigger and better event for next year.
Visitors
Enjoy Outdoor Ice Skating at Navy Pier
Given
the success of the ice rink installed for Winter WonderFest, Navy
Pier decided to extend the skating season after the holidays with
a rink on the normally unused Skyline Stage after the holidays.
Pier management
enlisted the help of Chicago Scenic to quickly create and implement
a design for a 56-foot by 104-foot ice rink that would fit on the
stage and part of the seating area of the theater.
CSSI Director
of Projects Pete Rahill coordinated and supervised the installation
along with providing logistical support and contract management
of the suppliers and engineers. LZA Technology provided structural
engineering support services for the building and ice deck. Gilco
Scaffolding provided the sub-structure and bridge for the rink,
and NuTemp provided the ice mats and chilling equipment to make
ice.
The installation
took less than four days and visitors were able to skate on the
new ice rink just one week after installation began. The rink will
be open through the first week of May.
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