‘Europe's biggest Super Bowl Party’ was held in the Vienna Albert Schultz ice rink
Austria - The Super Bowl – the final of the US National Football League – was celebrated at Europe's biggest Super Bowl Party, a night organised by Austrian private broadcaster PULS 4 in the Vienna Albert Schultz ice rink.
With over 4000 sports fans attending, Viennese company Pro Performance Wolfgang Sauter was responsible for the entire sound concept of the Super Bowl Party. The long-standing Alcons distribution partner was supported by Ils medientechnik GmbH from Leipzig, who under the management of Thomas Ils and Matthias Heilmann took over the detailed audio planning, supervised the network technology and managed the labour coordination. Also material disposition and logistics lay in the hands of the Leipziger. Uwe Biesgen from Creative Sound was on site for ils as responsible system engineer.
The Super Bowl Party was amplified from both sides of the ice arena. A total of 54 Alcons pro-ribbon LR18 line array modules were split into six clusters (two L / C / R), each complemented with two Alcons BC543 triple 18 '' cardioid subwoofers per cluster. In addition, Pro Performance relied on four Alcons BQ211 compact 21" subwoofers and two Alcons VR12 for DJ monitoring.
For stage monitoring / cheerleading monitoring, eight Alcons VR12s were used, and two Alcons VR8s were used for FOH monitoring. The sound system was powered by 24 Sentinel10 amplified loudspeaker controllers.
Celebrating a huge party in an already acoustically demanding ice rink poses challenges for the audio team. Wolfgang Sauter, owner of Pro Performance, explains: "The seating ranking is not even on both sides in the Albert Schultz ice rink. While the rank on the right is continuous, it is divided on the left side by a walkable level in upper and lower rank. On the right side above the rows of seats are the VIP areas with acoustically critical glass fronts. In addition, we had to deal with a very wide area of over 60 meters, but we were able to cover excellently with the 90° dispersion to 20 kHz of the LR18. "
Despite the adverse circumstances, the Alcons LR18 pro-ribbon line array system helped to achieve a very even level distribution, sometimes at a very high level. "When 4,000 people scream with enthusiasm in an ice rink, it's really loud in there," laughs Sauter. "The extraordinarily high level of speech intelligibility inherent in all Alcons systems could again convince on this occasion."
(Jim Evans)

Latest Issue. . .