drupacity: Special Activities Bring drupa 2016 Highlights to the City of Düsseldorf, Germany
CHICAGO — March 15, 2016 — When drupa 2016, the leading international trade fair for print and cross-media solutions, will take place from May 31-June 11 at the fairgrounds in Düsseldorf, Germany, the city is ready to welcome the hundreds of thousands of visitors from around the world with special activities in the city. Düsseldorf will be painted red with numerous activities as the metropolis will be transformed into drupacity. The goal of this joint initiative of Messe Düsseldorf and Destination Düsseldorf is not to merely create visibility for the trade fair theme in the city, but rather to make it come alive. Be it a rolling 3D laboratory or fashion collections made of paper — dozens of attractive offerings will communicate the core drupa theme in an innovative and creative way that is understandable to the general public while targeting international visitors as well as residents of Düsseldorf.
“With the help of several events, Düsseldorf will demonstrate that the city and its residents identify with the trade fair theme. This promotes location ties. Of course we are delighted about the positive response to the initiative and the fact that Düsseldorf’s service industry is actively involved,” states Boris Neisser, managing director of Destination Düsseldorf. More than 50 partners from the hotel, gastronomy, retail and transportation sectors will support drupacity with diverse activities – from a “paper art market” and innovative 3D projects to“drupabases’ in hotels, at the airport and the central train station as well as in other locations.
One highlight will be “Wolfgang” — a Berlin-style double-decker bus converted into a mobile 3D printer laboratory by the GoetheLab at the Technical University of Aachen (Germany). It will bring the latest 3D printing scientific discoveries from the stationary lab into the city, making technology understandable while bringing it alive. Eight computer workspaces complete with 3D printers allow visitors to learn how to virtually construct an object that will later be printed three-dimensionally. In addition, the FabBus – a combination of the words “fabber” and “bus” – will feature a showroom with specialist books on the subject, a lounge area as well as a coffee and tea bar. The nickname “Wolfgang” comes from Germany’s most famous poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, in reference to the GoetheLab on Goethe Street in Aachen.
The drupa highlight theme 3D printing will also be visible throughout the city center, in shopping malls and large department stores. In the Schadow Arkaden, visitors will be able to observe how the Düsseldorf TV tower appears on so-called delta towers over the course of the entire trade fair. Or how a 15-second body scan transforms into a unique 3D figure and how giveaways (little ghosts that glow in the dark) are produced in as little as 20 minutes. At the Galeria Kaufhof Am Wehrhahn the winner of a drawing contest will receive the subject of his/her drawing as a 3D object.
The Kö avenue will feature exhibits of extraordinary items made of paper. The “Paper Art Market” at stilwerk will show works by various artists, while the Kö Galerie will present a special fashion collection made of paper, designed by students of the Media Design School Düsseldorf.
Düsseldorf’s hotel and gastronomy businesses will spoil their guests at “drupabases” — for example, with special culinary delights. In addition, over 100 bakeries will offer the special “druPRINTen” cookies, decorated with the drupacity logo and a Düsseldorf motif. They will also be handed out at the airport and in hotels.
Upon arrival, visitors to Düsseldorf will be greeted by Drupaulas and Drupauls teams dressed in red and by a special testimonial billboard campaign at the Düsseldorf airport and the central train station. These testimonials are intentionally not from celebrities but from representatives of individual professions, welcoming drupa guests with personal statements. As a memento of their visit, all drupa guests will receive a souvenir at the tourist information locations: the city symbol – the Düsseldorf cartwheel — as a 3D figure.
The “Düsseldorf inside” city guide will include a comprehensive overview of the drupacity programs. It will be available at the fairgrounds as well as at more than 400 distribution points in Düsseldorf and throughout the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Starting in April, the program will also be posted online at www.drupacity.de and published via Messe Düsseldorf’s social media channels.
All information on drupacity is available in German and English, and Drupaula and Drupaul teams will be able to help in several languages.