The Province

Dazzling drone show wows crowds every night at PNE

Synchroniz­ed lights create an aerial spectacle

- CHERYL CHAN chchan@postmedia.com twitter.com/cherylchan

Move over, fireworks. The drones are in town. Instead of the usual fireworks capping a day at The Fair at the PNE, this year a fleet of drones takes centre stage in a choreograp­hed light show synced to music.

“It’s a really cool new art medium,” said Everett Findlay, the CEO of Arrowonics, a Toronto-based tech startup that puts together the nightly finale mounted above a pond and can be viewed from Festival Park. “It’s working in 3-D space as opposed to a flat canvas.”

The show, called the Northern Light Sky display, is designed to showcase B.C.’s natural beauty. Equipped with LED lights, the drones fly in formation, about 100 metres high, and dance, shimmer and glitter in the night sky like giant fireflies, forming shapes of a mountain, a flower, a bird, and the northern lights.

The show lasts just over seven minutes, though total flying time clocks in at about 11 minutes. The drones’ battery life maxes out at 15 minutes.

Drone shows are still relatively uncommon. Arrowonics is the first company in Canada to be approved to mount multi-drone performanc­es for audiences, said Findlay.

The company grew out from a research lab at the University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies. Its founder, Hugh Liu, is a professor; Findlay was a graduate student in the program before he joined the company.

The challengin­g part of mounting a drone show is in the behind-thescenes: Designing the software, creating the communicat­ions systems, the logistics of transporti­ng drones from city to city. Another hurdle is getting the permits from Transport Canada. Flying unmanned aerial vehicles is heavily regulated in Canada, and there’s a plethora of safety measures in place, including a geo-tether, an invisible dome that limits the drones’ fly zone. But once all that is in place, there’s not a lot of incrementa­l costs to putting on a drone show nightly, explained Findlay, making it a more cost-effective alternativ­e to crowd-pleasing spectacles than fireworks.

“With our technology, you can put a couple people here, recharge the batteries, and go night after night,” he said. “There’s massive potential to have an unreal show every night that doesn’t cost a ton.”

Drone shows got a high-profile boost at this year’s Super Bowl halftime show when 300 drones recreated a shimmering American flag during a portion of Lady Gaga’s performanc­e at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas.

Intel’s Shooting Star squad holds the current world record for most drones flying simultaneo­usly with a fleet of 500 drones taking to the air in Germany last November.

Findlay believes it’s just a matter of time before drone shows become more mainstream, and could rival fireworks in popularity — and possibilit­y.

“This is not going to be a flash-inthe-pan technology,” he said. “Soon, you’re going to have thousands of them flying together in the sky with the possibilit­y of creating 3-D animation, essentiall­y creating movies in the sky.”

But that’s in the future. For this summer at least, the company’s work is already paying off in the oohs-and-aahs and applause from the crowd.

“That’s the most rewarding thing,” said Findlay. “To hear the crowd enjoy something you worked so hard to put on.”

The Northern Light Sky show starts at 10:15 p.m. nightly at Festival Park.

 ?? PHOTOS: GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG ?? Zev Bertini, left, and Samuel Zhao hold up drones from the drone light show at the PNE Vancouver. The drones use LED lights to create midair patterns and displays.
PHOTOS: GERRY KAHRMANN/PNG Zev Bertini, left, and Samuel Zhao hold up drones from the drone light show at the PNE Vancouver. The drones use LED lights to create midair patterns and displays.
 ??  ?? Zev Bertini attaches the portable battery packs to drones used in a drone light show at the PNE Vancouver.
Zev Bertini attaches the portable battery packs to drones used in a drone light show at the PNE Vancouver.

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