Disney Presents ‘HoloTile’ Floor For Physically Walking In Virtual Realms
By Mikelle Leow, 23 Jan 2024
Video screenshot via Disney Parks
When Disney Imagineer Lanny Smoot isn’t busy conjuring up the magic you’ve come to expect from the House of Mouse, he’s inventing something to make traversing the virtual world a tad more fantastical. He’s come up with the ‘HoloTile’, which is more than a fancy floor. It’s a stepping stone for experiences that straddle the real and imaginative realms.
The HoloTile is an omnidirectional treadmill floor, designed to let users walk in any direction on the spot. It keeps them centered on the platform, ensuring an effortless stroll through immersive landscapes while confining them to a designated space.
Smoot has been inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, and he’s the first Disney Imagineer to receive this honor, following in the footsteps of Walt Disney himself. The inventor and Disney Research Fellow’s legacy is marked by over 100 patents, including the HoloTile, speaking to his creative genius and the ability to push the boundaries of what’s possible.
The HoloTile is made up of small, circular pieces, and these segments move and rotate in response to the walker’s steps, enabling movement in all directions. This design is so versatile that more than one person can be on the same platform, each strolling in a different direction, without interfering with each other’s paths.
Video screenshot via Disney Parks
In a video from Disney announcing this milestone, Smoot unveils and demonstrates the HoloTile. “I can walk on this omnidirectional walking floor in any direction I want; it will automatically do whatever it needs to have me stay on the floor,” he explains.
The high-tech treadmill isn’t merely for solo adventures. It’s also built for company, allowing multiple users to simultaneously explore virtual spaces. This means groups can walk endlessly in their chosen directions without the fear of bumping into each other or walking off the edge of the platform. The shared VR experience opens the floor (ahem) for collaborative ventures, be it in gaming, training, or even virtual tourism.
Beyond VR, Smoot sees the HoloTile playing a role in entertainment. He envisions theatrical stages being embedded with these tiles to allow dancers to perform intricate routines, adding a new layer to their artistry. “There are so many applications for this type of technology,” he asserts.
Video screenshot via Disney Parks
Notably, it could enhance the way we experience theme parks, offering a more interactive and immersive way to explore virtual worlds.
Whether navigating through the Happiest Place on Earth, in your home, or onstage, it’s still early days for this technology, and its full potential and applications are yet to be unlocked.
[via Gizmodo, Deseret News, WDWNT, video and screenshots via Disney Parks]