
At the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, MC2’s booth for Michelin featured two simulator floors that let visitors “Be the Tire.” When they stepped onto the floor mat and placed their hands on the dashboard, they experienced the road from a tire’s point of view—feeling vibrations from the bumps and dips of various road surfaces.

For a low-key yet high-impact display, greeting card company JustWink parked a tricked-out a truck at the 2013 National Stationery Show in New York. Called the Wink Wagon, the truck had an HD screen, tablet devices, and a speaker system along with its bright graphics and product displays.

At the 2012 National Association of Convenience Stores in Las Vegas, MC2 created a “Convenience Store of the Future” for the Hershey Company that integrated physical and virtual components. On one wall, an 18- by 20-foot screen presented a 3-D model of a convenience store that visitors could navigate with an Xbox controller to see Hershey’s marketing ideas in context.

Jack Morton Worldwide's bilevel booth for Ericsson at Mobile World Congress 2013 also included an on-site coffee shop with exposed lightbulbs and an eclectic mix of seating.

Freeman created a self-guided exhibit intro for Siemens at the 2012 Audiology Now Conference in Boston. While listening to headsets, attendees learned about the technologies they would experience in the exhibit.

For a New York Times exhibit that traveled to the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show, Macworld, and South by Southwest, Sparks created a multimedia experience in which attendees used iPads, smartphones, and tablets to do things like make Word Cloud portraits—images of guests created by a computer that searched for words within the Times’s article database.