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Contact LCI:
Ph: 661-294-8801
Fax: 661-294-8806

Lester Creative, Inc.
28170 Avenue Crocker
Suite 100
Valencia, CA 91355

'Hydro-Tesalatron'
Casino Rama
Artist's Journey
Atlantis
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‘HYDRO-TESLATRON’
at NIAGARA FALLSVIEW CASINO

 

Visitors to the new Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort in Ontario, Canada, are greeted at the facility's entrance with a Las Vegas-style spectacular. “Hydro-Teslatron” is a Jules Verne-esque fountain show designed, built and installed by Lester Creative, Inc.

“It goes from a dormant fountain to an infusion of power that feels like it’s going to explode,” notes Lester. It uses high-tech lasers, LED technology (light emitting diode) and 7,000 gallons of recycled water flowing through replicas of generators and turbines to tell a seven minute story. Lester says he wanted to create a “celebration of energy” and an “electrical collage” to recognize Niagara Falls as the birthplace of the idea of harnessing electricity to light large areas.


Rushing water turns from tranquil blue to reddish-orange, while “electrical sparks” run up and down the interior of the dome.
 




Lester Creative was chosen by Falls Management Company and the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Commission to design and build the $6.5 million attraction for the rotunda of their new development at the edge of Niagara Falls. 'Hydro-Teslatron' is a Jules Verne-esque video and light-animated fountain, an 8-mintue show commemorating the dawning of hydroelectric power.

“This attraction pays tribute to the importance of hydroelectric power and the genius of Yugoslavian inventor Nikola Tesla,” said Lawrence H. Lester, owner of Lester Creative, who conceived of and designed the Hydro-Teslatron. “He long held that the power of the falls could bring electricity to the masses.” The father of alternating current (AC), Tesla worked with Westinghouse to harness that energy in 1896, as Niagara Falls became the first site in North America to generate and distribute AC power.

As the audience looks on, a 45-foot-tall fountain with cascading weirs and funnels turns into a display of electrical energy. The energy is ostensibly generated by the pulsing water turning three simulated six-foot diameter turbines at the base. The water volume gets turned up, and the fountain appears to grow increasingly out of control, as communication between a maintenance worker and his boss are misconstrued (the audience hears voices only, as if the two men were communicating via walkie-talkie). Soon the light emitting diode (LED) panels are pulsing a fiery orange-red, the water is churning and foaming, and electrical charges apparently shoot through five faux power transmission cables looping from the fountain’s pinnacle across to the ribs of the etched glass dome and down the rotunda walls. Audience members sitting on marble benches around the perimeter get a buzz, to add to the fun.

At least three dozen subcontractors worked on the project under Lester’s direction. They provided acrylic and fiberglass components, LED systems, fiber optics, specialty painting, plumbing, lighting, sound systems, computer controls and more. The attraction incorporates two million feet of fiber optics. More than 760,000 LEDs make up the curved video displays that cover a variety of fountain surfaces. The attraction is a focal point and icon for the new $1 billion casino and entertainment complex.
 

©2000 Lester Creative, Inc.

Last updated: September 12, 2004