Monday, March 10, 2008
Recent O&E Project: Mystic Lake Casino retail space in Mall of America
If you live in the Twin Cities, you can check out one of our recently completed O&E projects in person at the Mall of America. The O&E team worked with the project management team at Design Build Solutions to remodel the 1200 square foot Mystic Lake Casino retail space for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community.
The objectives were to update the Mystic Lake store and tie it to the current casino marketing campaign, “Closer to the Action,” with an emphasis on laying the foundation for a positive, fun family experience at the Mystic lake Hotel & Casino. In addition, we were asked to create a portion of the store to display exhibits about tribal culture and history.
The current layout of the store was inherited from the previous owner and the environment was never reformatted to suit the Client. Our design goal was to reformat the store to suit the customers’ needs while enhancing the employees’ ability to provide service. Of course keeping cost under control is always expected. One of the early stated needs was to create a visual icon to draw visitors from the walkways into the store.
The final design carried some design elements from the main hotel and from the casino gaming areas. As you enter the space, the main desk is themed after a cashiers counter with a subtle hint to the “cage” in the metal work above the desk. The materials are mostly earthen in tone with a few hints of air and fire. All the materials are deep and rich to help convey the luxury and warmth of the hotel and casino environment.
To improve the store layout, we moved the main desk from one side of the store to the center, enabling the employees to better manage the two “halves” of the store without leaving any blind spots. The south half of the store was themed with a more subtle color palate and warmer tones. This area houses the cultural history exhibits. (below)
The north half (below) is more energetic with rich purple walls and dramatic lighting. Large flat screen displays are placed around the space with dynamic video content managed remotely by the casino marketing team.
The Icon developed to draw attention is a large, 11 foot tall, stylized teepee structure. Part traditional motif and part technological beacon, the dancing lights and art-deco patterns are reflections of both the casino environment and hotel lobby. Housed in one face of the teepee is an interactive video screen that provides information to visitors about the hotel and casino as well as upcoming events and promotions.
The store is located on the 2nd level of the Mall of America (near Sears), in Bloomington, Minnesota. For more information or to contact O&E Design Group to help with your retail project, visit our website!
Labels:
Mall of America,
Mystic Lake Casino,
Portfolio,
Projects,
Retail
Monday, February 25, 2008
Gracie makes headlines!
Our very own Jeremy Womack and his trusty sidekick Gracie (pictured above on the left) can be found featured today in an article on dog fostering in the latest Metro magazine. Check out the article online here! Jeremy and the rest of the O&E gang are avid dog lovers, but the Womacks take it to a whole other level, fostering homeless rottweilers and pit bull terriers for A Rotta Love Plus!
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Design Process at Frog Design by Wired Mag
Here at O and E, design process is so important to what we do. Keeping up with the industry helps us learn and grow. Here in as article from Wired Magazine about the industrial design process at Frog Design.
Birth of a Gadget: Inside the Industrial Design Process
Monday, November 12, 2007
AMA Annual Conference: "Designature"
Last Tuesday I had the opportunity to volunteer at the AMA Minnesota chapter's annual conference, held at the St.Paul River Centre. The theme of this year's conference was design, which is how myself and the local design community became involved. I thought the caliber of speakers was fantastic, and had I not already known it was a marketing conference, I would have mistaken it for an IDSA conference with all the great design content. At any rate, it was an exciting day for me as a designer, seeing so many marketers spending a day learning about the power of design.
Among the speakers I had the chance to hear were Scott Williams of Morgans Hotel Group, Joe Heron of AirForce Nutrisoda, and Eric Ryan of Method to name a few. Other sessions were lead by representatives from Juut Salon, Sonicrim, Ecolab, Sundberg-Ferar, Mosquito, Capsule, Weehouse, 3M, and others.
There was just too much good stuff to put into one post without getting too wordy, but I'm working on a summary article for our next IDSA MN newsletter, which should be out in the next couple months, and downloadable on the chapter website!
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Happy Halloween!
If you didn't make it out to the IDSA Minnesota chapter's Halloween party last Thursday, well, you missed out! It was a great time and almost everyone arrived in costume. The party was held at one of our member's homes on Summit Ave in St. Paul, a truly indescribable house adorned with an eclectic mix of found objects and souvenirs from their world travels.
This posting is a few days after the event, but being that today is Halloween, I thought it would be appropriate to show off some of the costumes. Visit the IDSA MN site for a link to see these photos and others on a larger scale.
Cool Green Stuff
I'm pretty stoked today as my pre-ordered copy of Cool Green Stuff arrived in the mail today. I have a fun little online side venture going where I sell items that I make out of my recycled junk mail, and my hand-rolled paper beads are featured in this book. So, I had to order one! It is also being published out of Australia & New Zealand under the name "Cool Hunting: Green."
Besides the fact that "Junk Mail Gems" is in it, this is a pretty nice little book. It is well designed and every page features beautiful full-color photography of another cool object. Nobody paid to be in this book...artists from around the globe submitted their work for consideration, which makes for some pretty interesting designs you probably have not have seen before!
Friday, October 26, 2007
New Winter Project
No question, I am a dork at heart. For a long time I have been fascinated by the shrinking gap between the computer and the real world. Technology like rapid prototyping and 3D projection systems have been a big part of my interest in design.
Here is a project I am planning on building this winter.
A low cost desk top Fabber, seems easy enough right?
RepRap
Here is a project I am planning on building this winter.
A low cost desk top Fabber, seems easy enough right?
RepRap
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