Avolites Ltd is a multinational technology company based in Park Royal, London. Avolites manufactures high end professional lighting control consoles, stage dimming equipment, and media servers for use in the professional stage lighting and media control systems industries. In 2011 the company expanded into the media server sector of the entertainments technology market by acquiring software developed by Immersive Ltd, supplying control systems used in the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, and the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. The company has received awards for many of its products, including the ART-series dimmers, the Sapphire Media, and the Ai media server software.
Company type | Private company limited by shares[1] |
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Industry | Professional stage lighting and media control systems |
Headquarters | , |
Key people |
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Products |
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Website | avolites |
History
editAvolites started as a lighting production company in 1976 when a group of touring road crew formed a company to manufacture their designs for a touring dimmer rack, the Avolites FD dimmer.[6][7] The company then expanded into manufacturing lighting control consoles, initially releasing the 8100 series, before creating the QM500 series in 1983. During the 1980s the reputation of the brand grew[8] and by the late 1980s the company was purchased by Carlton Television.[9] The company was returned to private ownership as part of a management buy out in 1991. Eventually the lighting production work was discontinued and the company focused on equipment manufacturing only.[5][9]
During the 1990s the company introduced several new products designed to control the range of intelligent lighting products that were emerging onto the market at the time, releasing the Rolacue Sapphire, Pearl 2000 (released 1995), Sapphire 2000 (released 1998) and Diamond II/III consoles. Most of these consoles were based on Motorola 68000 family processors. In 1996 the company also updated the FD dimmer, replacing it with the Art 4000.
During the 2000s the dimmer product range was redesigned again, resulting in the Art 2000 series of racks; the Art 2000i installation racks and - in the later part of the decade - the PowerCube dimmer/distribution units.[6] In 2001 Avolites launched the Diamond 4 range of control consoles,[10] which was based on a conventional PC motherboard instead of custom made hardware reliant on Motorola processors. Although the custom hardware consoles were still sold and updated in stages during the 2000s, the company gradually moved software development towards the Windows OS running on conventional PC motherboards. This move allowed the company to re-write its lighting control software, resulting in the release of the Titan software series in the late 2000s.
Since the introduction of Titan the company has designed a range of consoles specifically to run the software, including the Titan One USB DMX dongle, Titan Mobile, Tiger Touch and Sapphire Touch consoles, which were all introduced between 2009 and 2012.
Avolites Media
editDavid Green, Mark Calvert and Ralph Lambert formed a VJ collective known as Inside-Us-All initially working on visual effects for the rave and party scene. The trio decided to expand into more corporate work and took on a new staff member, John Munro, forming the Pixel Addicts company at the time. Pixel Addicts was later renamed to Immersive and it was within Immersive that the "Addict" media server software was developed.[11]
In June 2011, Avolites acquired the rights to the Addict media server software developed by Immersive,[12][5][13] rebranded it as "Ai" and formed a spin-off company called Avolites Media.[11] The media server products were used in the Olympic opening and closing ceremonies of 2012 to perform video mapping across the audience seats.[14][15]
Management changes
editIn October 2012, the company appointed JB Toby and Koy Neminathan as Technical Director and Sales Director respectively. Steve Warren moved into the position of Business Development Director.
In February 2018, Paul Wong was appointed as managing director, replacing Richard Salzedo who is now the group chairman.
Products
editAvolites has manufactured a wide range of lighting control products, accessories and software, but is best known for its range of control consoles and dimmer racks.
1977 B100 Console, 1978 FC Dimmers, 1983 QM500 Console, 1992 Rolacue Sapphire, 1994 Rolacue Pearl, 1999 Pearl 2000, 2001 Diamond 4, 2006 Pearl Expert, 2008 Titan v1, 2011 Tiger Touch, 2013 Expert Pro, 2018 Ai Q3 Media Server, 2021 Diamond 9 (D9-215 and D9-330)
References
edit- ^ "Companies House Webcheck - company number 02578003". Web CHeck. Companies House. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- ^ "Contact Us". Avolites Website. Avolites Ltd. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- ^ "Avolites announces the appointment of Paul Wong as Managing Director". Avolites Website. Avolites Ltd. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ a b "Avolites Ltd appoints two new directors". LsiOnline. Lighting & Sound International. Archived from the original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ a b c d Rushton-Read, Sarah (February 2012). "Avolife, the Universe & Everything". Lighting & Sound International: 64–68. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- ^ a b "The Avolites Company Timeline". Avolites Website. Avolites Ltd.
- ^ "Avolites History". Avolites Website. Avolites Ltd. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
- ^ Baldwin, Colin. 30 YEAR HISTORY OF ROCK LIGHTING AND SOUND IN AUSTRALIA (PDF). Colin Baldwin Consulting. p. 9.
- ^ a b "Profiles - a light-hearted look at industry personalities - Steve Warren". etnow. Entertainment Technology Press Ltd. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
- ^ Moody, James L (2010). Concert Lighting: Techniques, Art and Business. Oxford: Elsevier Inc. ISBN 9780240806891.
- ^ a b "Interview - Dave Green". Lighting and Sound International: 82. July 2013. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
- ^ "Avolites Media's Prolight + Sound Debut". Entertainments Technology News on the Web. 28 Mar 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
- ^ "PLASA 2012: Avolites Media showcases Sapphire". LsiOnline. Lighting & Sound International. Archived from the original on 14 September 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ "Avolites Controls Pixel Seats at Olympics Ceremonies". Projection, Lights and Staging News. Timeless Communications, Las Vegas. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
- ^ Conner, Margery. "London Olympic stadium integrates LEDs, seating for landscape video". Designing with LEDs. Retrieved 8 May 2013.