Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex
Immersive experiences • Design • Manufacture • Immersive art and attractions
Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex
Immersive experiences • Design • Manufacture
• Immersive art and attractions
The forest at the edge of the sky
Wētā Workshop partnered with China Duty Free Group (CDF) and Dafeng to transform Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex — the retail experience at the world’s largest duty-free shopping complex into a multisensory — immersive journey, setting the benchmark in retailtainment.
This bespoke immersive experience, called Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky, fills the five-storey-high and 50-metre-wide atrium and showcases the story of a fantastical Hainan.
The forest at the edge of the sky
Wētā Workshop partnered with China Duty Free Group (CDF) and Dafeng to transform Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex — the world's largest duty-free shopping complex — into a multisensory, immersive journey, setting the benchmark in retailtainment.
This bespoke immersive experience, called Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky, fills the five-storey-high and 50-metre-wide atrium and showcases the story of a fantastical Hainan.
Project gallery
Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex has received numerous accolades since opening at the end of 2022, with The Moodie Davitt Report hailing it as “an outstanding statement of creativity and imagination captured (and executed) in one stunning location”. The experience was awarded the Trinity Award for Non-Airport Retailer of the Year: CDF Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex and Best Commercial Complex of the Year — Platinum Award at the GBE HOPSCA Awards 2022-2023.
Project gallery
Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex has received numerous accolades since opening at the end of 2022, with The Moodie Davitt Report hailing it as “an outstanding statement of creativity and imagination captured (and executed) in one stunning location”.
The experience was awarded the Trinity Award for Non-Airport Retailer of the Year: CDF Haikou International Duty-Free Shopping Complex and Best Commercial Complex of the Year — Platinum Award at the GBE HOPSCA Awards 2022-2023.
Our challenge was to create a shopping experience that would draw customers into the physical space and become a visitor destination in its own right. Wētā Workshop’s Immersive Experiences team led the conceptual and core design process of the atrium, creating a culturally rich and wonderfully unique immersive experience where shoppers are treated as audience members, of and participants in, a fantastical, dream-like world.
The project took place in 2022 while Covid-19 was still disrupting travel plans around the world. Our crew managed most of Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky from New Zealand before senior creative director Andrew Thomas and designer LiWen Choy were able to visit Haikou and co-ordinate the physical install and on-site art direction in the project’s final stages.
Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky celebrates the natural environment of Hainan and amplifies it into a fantastical, immersive and interactive world within the mall’s atrium. Wētā Workshop’s designers looked towards the local ecology of Hainan for inspiration when creating the experience.
Be part of movie magic
An interactive, 29-metre-tall LED screen invites guests to engage with it in four ways. On the hour, a vibrant animation tells the story of a boy and girl as they discover the hyper-fantastical version of Hainan.
Standing on an illuminated floor may cast a visitor’s enlarged shadow on the ground, triggering the appearance of strange and remarkable creatures. Guests can interact with these creatures in wonderous, playful, humorous and surprising ways.
At other times, the screen becomes an abstracted, upside-down digital waterfall which visitors can part as though pairing back curtains. Doing so reveals a new and enchanting vista from this fantastical world. Alternatively, guests’ shadows become part of the flowing waterfall as water giants, stretching the mall’s five storeys.
Interact with the Tree of Light
The 25-metre-high Tree of Light features nearly 5,000 individually programmed orbs of ever-changing lights. It is interwoven with a functional spiral staircase and guests passing the orbs will cause them to gently shimmer, as if the tree is receiving and responding to their life energy.
The Tree of Light represents connectedness. Each orb is unique, however, together they form a single harmonious entity. For the most part, the music and movement between colours is slow and dreamy — as if the tree is gently breathing. Once an hour it becomes the key feature of an awe-inspiring light show, connecting key elements in the experience.
The challenge
Our challenge was to create a shopping experience that would draw customers into the physical space and become a visitor destination in its own right. Wētā Workshop’s Immersive Experiences team led the conceptual and core design process of the atrium, creating a culturally rich and wonderfully unique immersive experience where shoppers are treated as audience members, of and participants in, a fantastical, dream-like world.
The project took place in 2022 while Covid-19 was still disrupting travel plans around the world. Our crew managed most of Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky from New Zealand before senior creative director Andrew Thomas and designer LiWen Choy were able to visit Haikou and co-ordinate the physical install and on-site art direction in the project’s final stages.
Aura: The Forest at the Edge of the Sky celebrates the natural environment of Hainan and amplifies it into a fantastical, immersive and interactive world within the mall’s atrium. Wētā Workshop’s designers looked towards the local ecology of Hainan for inspiration when creating the experience.
Interactive animation
An interactive, 29-metre-tall LED screen invites guests to engage with it in four ways. On the hour, a vibrant animation tells the story of a boy and girl as they discover the hyper-fantastical version of Hainan.
Standing on an illuminated floor may cast a visitor’s enlarged shadow on the ground, triggering the appearance of strange and remarkable creatures. Guests can interact with these creatures in wonderous, playful, humorous and surprising ways.
At other times, the screen becomes an abstracted, upside-down digital waterfall which visitors can part as though pairing back curtains. Doing so reveals a new and enchanting vista from this fantastical world.
Alternatively, guests’ shadows become part of the flowing waterfall as water giants, stretching the mall’s five storeys.
Discover flora and fauna
The Tree of Light
The 25-metre-high Tree of Light features nearly 5000 individually programmed orbs of ever-changing lights. It is interwoven with a functional spiral staircase and guests passing the orbs will cause them to gently shimmer, as if the tree is receiving and responding to their life energy.
The Tree of Light represents connectedness. Each orb is unique, however, together they form a single harmonious entity. For the most part, the music and movement between colours is slow and dreamy — as if the tree is gently breathing. Once an hour it becomes the key feature of an awe-inspiring light show, connecting key elements in the experience.
Take an escalator through a tree
The 40-metre-long escalator is more than just a mode of travel, as visitors are treated to a journey through light and sound within the trunk of a gigantic tree. From the outside, the metallic-clad sculpture appears heavy and solid.
However, once inside, visitors discover kaleidoscopic facets of shifting light and colour, synced with a cinematic soundscape. Different light and sound sequences are activated as visitors pass through three interactive points until they emerge to panoramic views of the atrium.
Discover flora and fauna amplified in colour
Made from geometric panels of colour, a larger-than-life deer and its fawn graze through the atrium. Look up and tree canopies hang from the architecture and colourful trees provide seating for weary shoppers. A giant hummingbird, suspended mid-air, gathers nectar from a tree — the ecology of this fantastical version of Hainan is on full display.
All images courtesy of Dafeng (excluding those credited to CDF).
The escalator
The 40-metre-long escalator is more than just a mode of travel, as visitors are treated to a journey through light and sound within the trunk of a gigantic tree. From the outside, the metallic-clad sculpture appears heavy and solid.
However, once inside, visitors discover kaleidoscopic facets of shifting light and colour, synced with a cinematic soundscape. Different light and sound sequences are activated as visitors pass through three interactive points until they emerge to panoramic views of the atrium.
The atrium
Made from geometric panels of colour, a larger-than-life deer and its fawn graze through the atrium. Look up and tree canopies hang from the architecture and colourful trees provide seating for weary shoppers. A giant hummingbird, suspended mid-air, gathers nectar from a tree — the ecology of this fantastical version of Hainan is on full display.
All images courtesy of Dafeng (excluding those credited to CDF).
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