Video: Sportsnet unveils new Hockey Central studio
By Sportnet staff
TORONTO — It’s big and it’s spectacular.
At 11,000 square feet with nine separate sets and 52 monitors, Sportsnet today introduced the largest, most innovative sports studio in the country, providing fans with a sports entertainment playground that places them in the heart of the action and brings the NHL experience to life.
The Hockey Central Studio, which debuts October 8 — opening night of the NHL season — features a rotating main anchor desk with a 360-degree open environment allowing cameras to shoot from any angle, an 11x38ft. ultra-high-resolution monitor — the largest ever in a Canadian television studio, and an LED floor that displays videos and graphics and leads into a giant video monitor wall. The studio also features up to 14 cameras that can shoot up to three live broadcasts for three different networks at any one time.
“Our hosts and commentators gasped when they saw the studio in action for the first time, and we’re confident fans will as well,” said Gord Cutler, Senior Vice President of NHL Production, Rogers. “It’s cutting edge and allows us to showcase the game in ways never seen before that will keep fans on the edge of their seats.”
Designed by Jack Morton PDG, the company that designed the sets for Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium at Vancouver 2010 & London 2012, the set was eight months in the making, beginning with the design phase and coming full circle with the construction in mid-June and finishing in late September.
The studio is complemented by a new graphics and animation package, designed in-house by the Rogers Creative Group. It includes 10 different custom opening animations, 250 player animations, and more than 1,000 support animations that enhance storytelling and game analysis for viewers.
Hockey fans will hear fresh musical packages during NHL on Sportsnet broadcasts, with renowned Canadian composer Stephan Moccio’s enhanced version of the current Hockey Night in Canada song and Sportsnet theme music – both of which are performed by an all-Canadian 50-piece orchestra.
Strombo unveils his new home. pic.twitter.com/NIugmUxEyO
— Hockey Central (@SNHockeyCentral) September 29, 2014
Hey @PK Subban1 we're revealing our hockey set today. Look at the graphic they had in one of the monitors. pic.twitter.com/kT04IS7MEl
— Scott Moore (@MooreScottmoore) September 29, 2014
Goliath. Biggest high-res screen in sports broadcasting. pic.twitter.com/IYcLm9VYuV
— Hockey Central (@SNHockeyCentral) September 29, 2014
This season, the NHL on Sportsnet will deliver more than 550 national and regional regular season NHL games across nine networks, including CBC, City, Sportsnet (East, Ontario, West, and Pacific), Sportsnet ONE, Sportsnet 360 and FX Canada. Sportsnet has exclusive Canadian broadcast coverage of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, Stanley Cup Final, NHL All-Star Game, NHL Draft Lottery, NHL Draft, and the NHL Awards.
Rogers NHL GameCentre LIVEwill deliver more than 1,000 regular season games on tablet and smartphones for the upcoming season. Sportsnet is also the official regional television broadcast rights holder for the Vancouver Canucks, Edmonton Oilers, Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs (including radio rights on Sportsnet 590 The FAN) and Calgary Flames (including radio rights on Sportsnet 960 The FAN).
By The Numbers Sportsnet’s New Hockey Central Studio
40,000 Feet of electrical cable
15,000 Feet of pipe used for lighting grids
11,000 Square feet of space in Hockey Central studio
554 Number of games NHL on Sportsnet will broadcast this season 500 Studio lights
360 Degree shooting area in studio
170 Individual panels that make up Goliath, the largest ultra-high resolution monitor ever used in a Canadian television studio
80 Inch touch screen monitor equipped with live, interactive states in the Rogers Tech Zone
70 Per cent of the lighting in the studio that is low energy LED lighting
52 Total screens
38 Feet long by 11 feet high – the dimensions of Goliath, the new Hockey Central studio monitor, the largest ultra-high resolution monitor ever used in a Canadian television studio (4 times the resolution of a high definition monitor)
24 Wireless microphones
14 Cameras capturing the latest breaking NHL news and analysis
9 Distinct sets:
7 kilometres of LED light tape in the new studio
3 live broadcasts that can be shot in the studio simultaneously for 3 or more networks at any 1 time
1 Only studio of its kind in Canada
Related story:
10 things you need to know about the new Hockey Central studio, which costs more than three Torey Krugs: http://t.co/xqFDzYTHJJ
— Hockey Central (@SNHockeyCentral) September 29, 2014
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