Pittsburgh Robotics Network Trade Show Booth Animation
Client: Pittsburgh Robotics NetworkIndustry: robotics, automation, and trade show productionRole: trade show motion graphics and animationYear: 2025
Problem
Pittsburgh Robotics Network needed booth visuals that could carry energy across a large multi-screen installation, not just a single looping video. The content had to stay synchronized across standard screens, corner screens, and overhead signage while staying flexible enough for sponsor and robotics-community branding.
Client / industry
Pittsburgh Robotics Network represents the regional robotics, automation, and AI ecosystem. The booth needed to feel local, technical, and event-ready while supporting a high-traffic trade-show environment.
Input assets
Input assets included brand marks, sponsor logo groupings, booth-screen requirements, layout constraints, timing needs, and technical notes for the different screen formats and display positions.
Production process
MayoFlux built a procedural animation system to generate the moving visual blocks, grouped logo treatments, screen-specific timing, and synchronized motion across 40 standard displays, 8 corner screens, and 1 overhead screen.
Deliverables
Multi-screen booth motion loops, standard-screen exports, corner-screen versions, overhead signage content, and synchronized visual assets prepared for show-floor playback.
Outcome
The final booth package gave Pittsburgh Robotics Network a coordinated visual system that could fill a large exhibit footprint, draw attention from across the show floor, and keep local robotics branding consistent across every display.
Project notes
Pittsburgh Robotics Network needed a visual system for a trade-show booth with many screen sizes and orientations. A normal single-screen animation would not solve the problem; the content had to feel synchronized across the whole exhibit while still letting the booth carry sponsor and network branding clearly.
MayoFlux created a procedural animation workflow that generated moving blocks, timing, and logo groupings across the full display package. The system supported 40 standard-size screens, 8 corner screens, and 1 overhead screen, all moving in sync while preserving clean brand presentation.
The result was a booth-scale motion package built for visibility, repeat playback, and local robotics-community identity. It is a strong example of trade-show video production where the real deliverable is not one video, but a coordinated motion system for the whole booth.