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WET (company)

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WET
Founded1983
FounderMark Fuller, Melanie Simon, and Alan Robinson
Headquarters,
USA
Key people
Mark Fuller, CEO[2]
Websitewetdesign

WET,also known asWET Design,is awater featuredesign firm based inLos Angeles,California.Founded in 1983 by formerDisneyImagineersMark Fuller,Melanie Simon, and Alan Robinson,[3]the company has designed over two hundred fountains and water features using water, fire, ice, fog, and lights. It is known for creatingThe Dubai Fountain,the world's largest performing fountain, along with the 8-acre (3.2 ha)Fountains of Bellagio.[4]It has designed features in over 20 countries around the world, in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

WET holds more than 60 patents pertaining to lighting, water control, and specialty fountain devices that use air compression technology.[2]The company is a frequently cited source for the role water plays in communities other than for purely utilitarian needs. WET was also featured in and co-produced the 2013Discovery Channelreality television showThe Big Brain Theory, Pure Genius,where the winner of the show was given $50,000 and a one-year contract to work at WET.[5][6]

History[edit]

1980s[edit]

WET was founded as WET Enterprises, Inc., which at the time stood forWaterEntertainmentTechnologies, by Mark Fuller, Melanie Simon, and Alan Robinson in 1983.[3]All three had worked together as Imagineers at Disney. During his time at Disney, Fuller created the “Leapfrog” fountain atEpcot,using laminar technology, which evolved from the subject of his senior college thesis project at the University of Utah.[3][4]The company was renamed WET Design in 1985, the same year that Claire Kahn joined the company as Director of Design. Later, its name became simply WET from WET Design. The company also named WET Labs.

Surface water feature at Fountain Place (2008)

The company's first major project came in 1986 when it collaborated with the firm ofI. M. Pei[7]as well as landscape architectsDan Kileyand Peter Ker Walker to create the waterscape ofFountain Place(at Allied Bank Tower) inDallas,Texas.[3]The project showed the first use of WET's patented open-jointed paving in a fountain where shots of water appear from the openings in the plaza's surface.[4][8]

WET's first municipal project came in 1987 when it was commissioned to create a work for the Los Angeles Music Center.[9]The work was designed aroundPeace On Earth,[a]a controversial sculpture designed byJacques Lipchitz.[11]

In 1988, WET introduced the first of its patented shooters, the MiniShooter, which utilizes compressed air to propel water in the air, for the Seto Ohashi Exhibition in Sakaide City, Japan.[4]That same year, the company designed theSplatter Upbaseball game manufactured byWorlds of Wonder.[9]

1990s[edit]

WET teamed with architectsSkidmore, Owings & Merrillin 1991 for a water feature at theGas Company Towerin Los Angeles, California. WET designed a series of transparent in-floor elements with water displays on the underside, on which the public can walk and which stretched from the elevator lobby to the building's exterior garden. From 1994 through 1997, WET completed many projects throughout Asia including the Singapore features ofMillenia Walk,by Pritzker Architectural Prize Laureate Philip Johnson, the Ritz Carlton Hotel, and Bugis Junction. Additional projects included theJewelry Trade CenterinBangkok,Pattaya Festival Center in thecity of Pattaya,and again with the firm ofI.M. Pei,the Anggana Danamon Bank in Jakarta.[12]

Bellagio (2013)

One of the company's most notable designs came in 1998 when it collaborated withSteve Wynnto design The Fountains of Bellagio, for the Bellagio Hotel and Casino, in Las Vegas, Nevada.[13]The Fountains are set in an 8-acre (3.2 ha) manmade lake. Under Bellagio, WET collaborated with an array of composers and choreographers to create the Fountain's shows, including renowned composer Gerard Schurmann and the American choreographer, producer and directorKenny Ortega.[14]Contrary to urban myth, the lake is not filled with treatedgreywaterfrom the hotel. The lake is serviced by a freshwater well that was drilled decades prior to irrigate a golf course that previously existed on the site. The Fountains actually use less water than irrigating the golf course did. In the event of an emergency, the Fountain's reservoir can be pumped into firefighting equipment to assist any neighboring casino without drawing from the city system.[15]The Fountains of Bellagio introduced WET's motion controlled robotic water nozzles, built for WET by the robotics company Sarcos, for the first time in the industry.[4]After this project, WET expanded its manufacturing capabilities to where it is now manufacturing virtually all of its invented devices in house.[4]The company's feature incorporate a network of pipes with more than 1,200 individually programmed nozzles that make it possible to stage fountain displays coordinated with more than 4,500 lights. It is estimated that the Fountains cost $40 million to build. The nozzles are synchronized to music and shoot water up to 240 feet in the air.[4]Charles Fishman's, Big Thirst features how people have emotional bonds to water and highlights WET's Fountains of Bellagio project.

WET completed its first major project in Europe in 1998 with the fountains for the1998 Lisboa Expoin Lisbon, Portugal. The same year WET was recognized by the American Institute of Architects by receiving the Allied Professions Honor Award and was also featured in theCooper Hewitt National Design Museumexhibit "Fountains: Splash and Spectacle." In 1999 it completed a project for the Barcelona World Trade Center which featured water banners that emerged from the plaza in the central atrium of the project.

2000s[edit]

The Cauldron for the 2002 Winter Olympics

WET became part of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games inSalt Lake City, Utahby winning the competition for the design of the Cauldron that lights the Olympic flame.[16]The design included a 120-foot tower of reflective glass panels and incorporated water and fire.[16]Marrying both with function, tiny jets sent water down the glass sides of the Cauldron, to keep the glass and metal cooled and clean and give the effect of melting ice. WET also released a book titledCreating the Cauldronthat detailed the behind the scenes of the project and revealed how the company beat out others to win the competition, and how WET only had 18 months to create the Cauldron.[17]Upon the completion of the games, the Cauldron was installed at Rice Eccles Stadium at the University of Utah, in theSalt Lake 2002 Olympic Cauldron Park.

In 2005, WET was contracted to design a water themed set for the2005 MTV Video Music Awards,marking one of the company's first commissioned temporary features. The final design included 7,000 gallons of water that flowed under the stage, 2,000 feet of piping, and 8,000 feet of electrical wire.[18]

WET developed its third water feature in New York in 2004 as part of a renovation of theBrooklyn Museum.(The first was theMuseum of Modern Art's garden fountain in 1987 and the second wasRockefeller Center's Prometheus Fountain in 1988.) In 2005, WET completed two more projects in New York: the fountains atColumbus Circleand theUnited States Tennis Associationfeature.[19]For Columbus Circle, the company worked in collaboration with the Olin Partnership.[19]

Revson Fountain(2011)

WET was commissioned in 2006 to redesign theRevson Fountain,originally opened in 1964 at theLincoln Center for the Performing Arts,in New York.[18][20]The company was engaged to redesign the fountain at the recommendation of the firmDiller Scofidio + Renfrowho were the lead designers on the overall renovation of theLincoln Center.[4]

WET moved from Universal City toSun Valley, CAin 2006. In the same year, the company also collaborated with Steve Wynn a second time to create the Performance Lake at Wynn Macau.[21]It continued with casino designs in 2008 when the company was commissioned to transform the volcano feature at the Mirage Hotel and Casino.[22][23]

The Dubai Fountain (2010)

WET was credited in 2009 with creating the world's largest performing fountain, with its creation ofThe Dubai Fountain.The Fountain contains 6,600 underwater lights which can be seen from space more than 200 miles away. It was also in 2009 that the company was commissioned to create five fountains for theLas Vegas City Center.One fountain was the world's first choreographed ice feature with another being the world's widest programmable water wall.[24]

2010s[edit]

WET completed additional Dubai projects beginning in 2010. These include five fountains atBurj Khalifa Tower Parkin Dubai.[25]That same year in Beijing, WET's feature at the Global Trade Center premiered the company's WaterBells; manipulating laminar flow fountains to create dome-shaped sheets of water.

Wynn Macau (2013)

In 2012, WET enhanced the original 2006 design for the Wynn Macau, doubling the density of the design and debuting the world's brightest (280) watt) underwater LED lights that were engineered and manufactured by WET.[21]WET completed the installation of three fountains at the City Creek Center shopping mall in Salt Lake City, Utah in 2012. The fountains included dancing water, light, fire and music.[26]The company was also commissioned to create the fountain show for theExpo 2012 Yeosu Koreafor the expo's signature Big-O Water Feature.[27]The same year, WET created one of the largest water shows in the world with the completion ofAquanurain the Efteling theme park, in the Netherlands.[28]

WET createdLuminous,a water wall spanning over 3 stories tall for theW HotelsGuangzhou’s entrance, debuting with the hotel’s opening in April 2013. The WET-designed wall of water and light is composed of a thinly-woven metal screen over which water runs upon at different programmed rates to vary in appearance. In addition to choreographing the wall's surging water, WET used 5,000 color changing LEDs to allow the 19-meter mosaic of light, lines, and color to morph throughout the day.[29][30]

Sochi (2017)

For the2014 Winter Olympic GamesinSochi,Russia,WET createdThe Waters of the Olympic Park,a colorful choreographed fountain located in theSochi Medals Plaza.The feature was prominently featured during the Olympic Games’ opening and closing ceremonies. This second Olympic feature for WET (first being the2002 Winter OlympicsCauldron inSalt Lake City), houses a basin containing about 700,000 gallons of water, designed to reveal the five Olympic rings within performances. The feature is choreographed water displays set to a soundtrack of famous Russian composers includingTchaikovskyandKhachaturian.[31][32]

In late 2013, WET debutedLycaste,an interactive children's fountain named and designed after thelycasteorchidfor Dasada, a resort inPrachinburi,Thailand.Set upon a deck of teak wood, the feature is experienced via WET's LED lighting at day in bright white and night in vibrantly programmed color combinations.

Design features[edit]

WET has pioneered many of the technologies that have since become common in fountains built around the world, by others as well as WET. These technologies includelaminar flowfountains, fountains that arise from the open-jointed paving instead of from pools, fountains powered by compressed air instead of pumps, and fountains employing sophisticated underwaterrobots.[33]Hallmarks of WET fountains are that the water itself is the element of interest (nostatuarycovered by water); there are few if any boundaries between thefountainand viewers; the fountains display novel and surprising water forms not seen in traditional fountains; and many WET fountains take choreographic movement of the individual water elements to a level of precision and variable motion that approaches those of human performers. The company is also known for using multiple natural elements in its designs, like fog, fire, and ice; accompanying its sophisticated water forms, or alone.[4]

Select list installations[edit]

Overhead view ofThe Dubai Fountain.
Aquanura Efteling
Jewel Changi Airport

WET has completed more than 250 installations in countries throughout the world. Installations range from features so small that the water seen barely fills a cup, to the world's largest performing fountain, The Dubai Fountain, and the entire range in between. A partial list of its installations include:

  • 2023, Atlantis The Royal (5 Installations),Dubai,UAE
  • 2017, The Fountain atOkada Manila,Entertainment City, Parañaque, Metro Manila, Philippines

Awards[edit]

WET has received numerous awards and recognition for its work, including company founder Mark Fuller being named one of the100 Most Creative People In BusinessbyFast Company.[45]A partial list of its awards include:

  • 2013, Travelers’ Choice Award #1 US Attraction (In recognition of Fountains of Bellagio determined byTripAdvisorreviews)[46]
  • 2013, Entertainment Industries Council's SET Award for Documentary or Unscripted Non-fiction Category for The Big Brain Theory: Pure Genius (In recognition of The Big Brain Theory inspiring youth in science, engineering and technology from the EIC's 2013 SET Awards)[47]
  • 2012,THEAAward for outstanding achievement (Aquanura, Efteling)
  • 2012, Award of Appreciation (FromExpo 2012Yeosu Korea)
  • 2010, 50 Most Innovative Companies,Fast Company[38]
  • 2010, Los Angeles Architectural Award, Los Angeles Business Council[39]
  • 2009, Excellence on the Waterfront Award, Urban Waterfront Conference[40]
  • 2006, General Design Award of Honor,American Society of Landscape Architects[48]
  • 2004, Project of the Year: Cultural, New York Construction Best of Awards[49]
  • 2002, Solutia Design Award,Solutia[50]

References[edit]

  1. ^McNamara, Mary (9 December 2003)."In This City, Even Water Can Put On A Big Show".L.A. Times.Retrieved18 July2013.
  2. ^ab"The Big Brain Theory: Pure Genius – Mark Fuller".Retrieved18 July2013.
  3. ^abcdKogan, Rick (24 August 1997)."The Wizards Of Wet".Chicago Tribune.Retrieved18 July2013.
  4. ^abcdefghiSeabrook, John (11 January 2010)."Onward And Upward With The Arts: Water Music".The New Yorker.Retrieved18 July2013.
  5. ^Holmes, Linda (1 May 2013)."Discovery's Big Brain Theory Not That Kind Of Nerd TV".National Public Radio.Retrieved18 July2013.
  6. ^Nichols, Chris (25 April 2013)."WET Fountain Design, The Wonka Of Water".L.A. Mag.Retrieved18 July2013.
  7. ^Weeks, Jerome (7 January 2010)."Fountain Place Water Splasher Gets Props In The New Yorker".Art Seek.Retrieved18 July2013.
  8. ^"Dyamic fountain displays and methods for creating the same".Google patents.Retrieved10 September2013.
  9. ^abDi Rado, Alicia (4 August 1992)."Masters Of The Dancing Waters".L.A. Times.Retrieved18 July2013.
  10. ^"Peace On Earth".Public Art Works in the Los Angeles Civic Center and the Los Angeles Mall.Retrieved4 July2019.
  11. ^Knight, Christopher (22 May 2019)."Four blocks along Grand Avenue offer a sketch of shifting ideas in public art".The LA Times.Retrieved4 July2019.
  12. ^"Anggana Danamon".PEI Cobb Freed & Partners.Retrieved29 July2013.
  13. ^abDunn, Samantha (May 2010)."Fountain Head".L.A. Times Magazine.Retrieved29 July2013.
  14. ^"Bellagio's Mega-Fountain Exposed".Grid Skipper.25 January 2006.Retrieved27 September2013.
  15. ^"Bellagio".Vegas 4 Visitors.Retrieved10 September2013.
  16. ^abLoh, Laura (21 January 2002)."Making A Splash At Olympics".L.A. Times.Retrieved18 July2013.
  17. ^WET Design (2003).Creating the Cauldron: Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Winter Games.WET Design.ISBN9780972571401.
  18. ^abHagen, Cheryl (1 November 2005)."Video Music Awards Get Wet!".Live Design Online.Retrieved29 July2013.
  19. ^abcdPogrebin, Robin (16 August 2009)."The Lincoln Center Fountain Is Being Taught Some New Moves".The New York Times.
  20. ^Satzman, Darrell (14 March 2010)."A Gushing Combination of Showbiz, Engineering".L.A. Times.Retrieved18 July2013.
  21. ^abcdLeitao, Luciana (26 December 2012)."Big Splash".Macau Business.Retrieved29 July2013.
  22. ^Hodge, Damon (8 December 2008)."$25 Millinon Overhaul To Yield A Louder, Hotter Mirage Volcano".Travel Weekly.Retrieved29 July2013.
  23. ^Hopwood, Rosalind (2009).Fountains and Water: From Ancient Springs To Modern Marvels.Frances Lincoln Ltd.ISBN9780711227514.
  24. ^abcVelotta, Richard N. (16 December 2009)."Water – Swirling, Spewing, Frozen – To Entertain Visitors At CityCenter".Las Vegas Sun.Retrieved29 July2013.
  25. ^"The Back Drop Splendour Of Burj Khalifa".Landscape Magazine.December 2011.Retrieved29 July2013.
  26. ^Horiuchi, Vince (21 March 2012)."City Creek Fountains Share Lineage With Bellagio Attraction".Salt Lake City Tribune.Retrieved6 August2013.
  27. ^"Expo 2012 Yeosu Korea Uses Christie Visual Solutions For The Signature Big-O Show".Lighting And Sound America.Retrieved6 August2013.
  28. ^ab"Efteling opent Watershow Van 17 Miljoen Euro".Event Planner(in Dutch).Retrieved29 July2013.
  29. ^"W Hotels Worldwide Debuts in Mainland China with the Opening of W Guangzhou".Business Wire.April 3, 2013.
  30. ^"W Guangzhou".Uniqhotels.RetrievedMarch 21,2013.
  31. ^Madler, Mark (February 24, 2014)."WET Design Runs Rings Around Rivals".San Fernando Business Journal.Los Angeles, California: California Business Journals.RetrievedFebruary 26,2014.
  32. ^"California-based WET makes the waters dance at Sochi".Gizmag.RetrievedFebruary 26,2013.
  33. ^"WET Design Makes A Global Splash".The Valley.Retrieved29 July2013.
  34. ^Architectural Digest Middle-East (25 September 2021)."Mysterious and dramatic Water feature at Expo 2020 Dubai".
  35. ^Nusca, Andrew (30 May 2017)."Meet the Company Behind the World's Largest Water Fountain".Fortune.Retrieved27 December2017.
  36. ^Horiuchi, Vince (21 March 2012)."City Creek Fountains Share Lineage With Bellagio Attraction".The Salt Lake City Tribune.Retrieved1 August2013.
  37. ^Gladstone, E.C. (17 March 2010)."That's aquatainment!".Las Vegas Sun.Retrieved19 December2017.
  38. ^ab"Most Innovative Companies".Fast Company.March 2010.
  39. ^abBasulto, David (28 July 2010)."2010 Los Angeles Architecture Awards".Architecture Daily.Retrieved1 August2013.
  40. ^ab"Port of Los Angeles Receives Excellence Award From The Waterfront Center".Port of Los Angeles. 26 October 2009.Retrieved29 July2013.
  41. ^"USTA Debuts Enhancements To U.S. Open, Tennis Center".Rawuet Sports Industry Magazine.Retrieved1 August2013.
  42. ^Gardner, Kyla (17 September 2014)."Viral Video Bonds Water Tower Fountain Maker, 'Geeked Out' Tourist".dnainfo. Archived fromthe originalon 27 December 2017.Retrieved27 December2017.
  43. ^Hinshaw, Mark (26 November 1995)."Revitalized Seattle Center Shines Again".Seattle Times.Retrieved1 August2013.
  44. ^Travel Orlando, Florida: Illustrated Guide And Maps.Mobile Reference. 2007.ISBN9781605011769.
  45. ^"The 100 Most Creative People In Business".Fast Company.June 2010.
  46. ^"TRIPADVISOR PRESENTS TRAVELERS' CHOICE ATTRACTIONS".TripAdvisor.RetrievedApril 4,2014.
  47. ^"Star Trek Into Darkness, World War Z, Big Bang Theory, NCIS, Elementary, Mythbusters, Big Brain Theory, Bones, Nova, Iron Man 3, Person of Interest, Grey's Anatomy, Director Bryan Singer Among Honorees for Annual Science, Engineering & Technology (SET) Awards"(PDF).eiconline.org.RetrievedApril 4,2014.
  48. ^"General Design Award Of Honor".American Society of Landscape Architects.Retrieved1 August2013.
  49. ^"Project of the Year - Cultural".Construction. December 2004.Retrieved1 August2013.
  50. ^"Solutia Inc. Announced Innovative Design Award Winners".US Glass Magazine.October 2002.Retrieved1 August2013.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^See photo of statue with fountain.[10]

External links[edit]

Selected patents[edit]

  • US grant 4795092,Fuller, Mark, "Laminar flow nozzle", issued 3 January 1989, assigned to WET Enterprises Inc.
  • US grant 4852801,Fuller, Mark W. & Robinson, Alan S., "Airpowered water displays", issued 1 August 1989, assigned to WET Enterprises Inc.
  • US grant 4955540,Fuller, Mark W. & Robinson, Alan S., "Water displays", issued 11 September 1990, assigned to WET Enterprises Inc.
  • US grant 4978066,Fuller, Mark W. & Robinson, Alan S., "Fast acting airpowered water displays", issued 18 December 1990, assigned to Wet Designs