Danmon Systems Group collaborates for climate change conference

Apr 1, 2010 12:00 PM, By Peter Thomsen

This showcase highlights the technological infrastructure of the 15th annual United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change provided by a partnership among Danmon Systems Group, TV 2|DANMARK and SNG specialist East Productions.

    
The main media hall at the United
Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change in Copenhagen bustled
with activity 7-18 December 2009.

The main media hall at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Copenhagen bustled with activity 7-18 December 2009.

The 15th annual meeting of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change was held in Copenhagen at the Bella Center 7-18 December 2009. Known as the Conferences of the Parties (COP), the convention provided a forum for discussion and assessment of progress in dealing with worldwide climate change. Attendees included U.S. President Barack Obama, senior politicians and officials from 192 countries, and representatives from many major organizations.

To provide the COP15 TV/radio media infrastructure and management, the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs awarded the host broadcaster contract to a three-way partnership of Danish broadcaster TV 2|DANMARK, the Danmon Systems Group (DSG) and local SNG specialist East Productions.

The host broadcaster was required to support live TV and radio production and feeds throughout the conference, which included construction and maintenance of an international broadcasting center. A media city with 160 work spaces for broadcasters was designed, each of which received live video and audio from two plenary halls and five press briefing rooms. Other facilities provided recording of the proceedings, format conversion, a full TV studio, many stand-up positions, wireless cameras, radio cabins, editing facilities and satellite uplinks/downlinks. A rental shop offered equipment, service and support.

DSG provided a container with more than 90
connections for SNG and OB trucks.

DSG provided a container with more than 90 connections for SNG and OB trucks.

TV 2 provided project management, with production and support staff, booking and rentals; DSG built the international broadcast center, including extensive digital and analog infrastructure; and East Productions delivered OB production and uplink trucks and production staff.

System design commenced in September, with prebuild in October. On-site work began in November, with installation and final commissioning in December. For the communications core of the installation in the Bella Center, an extensive fiber backbone and an estimated 180km of A/V cable were installed, feeding approximately 4400 individual outputs.

The 180km of A/V cable was wired into the master control room racks. The project included wiring and interconnecting nearly 250 custom termination panels for 160 journalist cubicles. An additional 90 patch panels were also required as SNG interconnects.

Equipment

Extensive wiring was necessary for the
160 journalist work spaces.

Extensive wiring was necessary for the 160 journalist work spaces.

Besides production facilities, cameras, video servers and VTRs, the infrastructure included a Miranda NVISION router. This was chosen for its scalability (16 ×; 4 up to 1152 × 1152), inherent resilience and compact form factor.

The Miranda routers were operated via VSM Control's Virtual Studio Manager (VSM). VSM is a versatile system that can be operated via on-screen GUI or soft-configurable hardware panels. Individual panels can be configured as a single destination, multiple destination, X/Y or any combination of these. An optional incremental encoder can be assigned to control specific parameters.

For security purposes, special buttons are configurable — such as take, enable or lock — to guarantee safe operation and routing to critical destinations. All VSM panels provide various interfaces. An Ethernet interface is used to connect to the VSM network, and two local GPIs and GPOs are also provided. VSM LBP panels can be used as stand-alone or fall-back panels to directly control a router without any additional control system. For simple applications in stand-alone use, the panel can be provided with vsmSnap software to control router crosspoints without a server system. All network parameters and firmware updates are loaded using vsmDiscover software via the VSM network.

Integral components consisted of more than 100 modules from the Miranda Densité series in dual- and triple-height frames, including fiber I/O converters, digital video and audio distribution amplifiers, and analog video and audio DAs.

Some 180km of cable was wired into
the master control room racks.

Some 180km of cable was wired into the master control room racks.

Additional equipment included sync generators and monitoring equipment from DK Technologies, Alpermann & Velte GPS time code generators, Clear-Com Eclipse Digital Matrix intercoms and a Snell Alchemist Ph.C HD standards converter. Alchemist was made available as a rentable resource for broadcasters needing to convert 625/50 European signals to 525/60 or 1080i/59.94 for North America, Japan and Korea, as well as to other international standards.

Cobham's SOLO digital video transmitter was used for wireless camera links. Chosen for its small size and low power consumption, the transmitter employs MPEG encoding and COFDM modulation. This proved sufficiently durable in the mobile environment of the conference hall and covered distances of more than 750m.

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