Author Archives: Mike Gogan

Shakespeare’s Birthplace

In 2000 the Virtual Experience Company partnered with the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust to develop the world’s first realtime 3D virtual experience, specifically designed to enable disabled people to exlplore an historic building which had, up to then, been inaccessible to them. The Disability Discrimination Act required the owners of public spaces to provide access to disabled people or, if this was not possible, to provide a valid alternative. The Birthplace Trust and the Virtual Experience Company seized this opportunity to create a ground-breaking initiative.

The interactive experience enables visitors to explore the upper floor of the house, opening chests, drawing the curtains around the bed and picking up objects that are of interest to them. they can wander the house freely, as if they were actually there, no longer having to follow a pre-ordained route, watch a video or look at objects that someone else had chosen for them.

As one visitor put it: “When I was coming to see this new facility I was afraid i’d see something that would make me wish I could go upstairs. In fact, I think this is even better!”

This interactive is still in use today, some 16 years since it was first installed

Irish – English Dictionary

The Virtual Experience Company digiised and published the 40,000 page manuscript of Liam S Gogan’s Irish-English Dictionary.  The work was a supplement to one of the iconic 20th Century works on the Irish language, Dinneen’s Dictionary. Each slip was microfilmed, scanned and indexed, providing a truly 21st Century version of this iconic work.

Visit the full site here

 

In association with this project, we also collaborated in the production of a 1-hour TV documentary on the life of LSG. It tells the story of a man who lived through some of the most turbulent times of the 20th Century, not just in Ireland but across Europe.

Put your feet up and click here

Na Coisithe1 from Bandit Films Ireland on Vimeo.

Roman Carmarthen

The Roman occupation of Britain lasted from 43AD until 465AD. The evidence from this period is found across the country in town, roads villas and elsewhere. The town of Carmarthen is one such place where the influence of the Romans lives on. We produced an animation with narration in Welsh and English, describing the history of Roman Carmarthen