Stageco enjoy best . . .

   
  A Bigger Bang . . .  
   
  Veritgo with U2 . . .  
   
  Close Encounters . . .  
   
  Have a nice day . . .  
   
  Touring with Angels . . .  
   
  Johnny Hallyday . . .  
   
  FIFA World Cup . . .  
   
  Winter Games . . .  
   
  NFL Kick-off . . .  
   
  Asian Games . . .  
   


2006 has been a breathtaking year for the business and it’s now the ideal time to take a look at the way the company has developed.

When we started 22 years ago as a local staging provider for the famous Rock Werchter Festival in Belgium, nobody could have predicted that our ‘Tower System’ would become the standard in the outdoor entertainment industry. In 2006 our ‘Black Steel’ can be seen on five different continents worldwide, following our clients on their way to new and successful events.

Many things have changed in 22 years as the staging market has expanded, become more complex and more technical. But one thing remains the same - our passion for staging.

It’s a passion that we share with our clients, irrespective of the type of event they are organising. We will remember 2006 as the year the outdoor music and festival market exploded. There were a record number of huge tours and festivals, many running concurrently.

In addition to the sheer number of shows and tours, the stage designs have taken on an unprecedented scale and complexity. It was only by working closely with designers and all production departments that we were able to achieve every deadline – even the tightest.

As you’ll see from this newsletter, our involvement in sports and corporate events has also expanded. In future editions we will highlight a growing number of major indoor productions such as the Brit Awards, I&T dance parties, Marco Borsato, Music Halls in Ahoy Netherlands and Clouseau in Belgium, all of which we are proud to be an essential team member.

None of this would have been possible without the technical skills and the endless commitment of all our crews and subcontractors whom I would like to thank. After all, this will always be a “people’s” business.

I wish everybody a great end to the year and look forward to a busy new season.




Stageco President

As a vibrant year for the live music industry draws to a close, Stageco has an opportunity to draw breath and reflect on an incredible 2006, during which the company has exceeded previous records in supplying staging solutions to events in all corners of the globe.

The network of eight worldwide offices and the extraordinary efforts of the company’s staff enabled Stageco to successfully design, manufacture, transport and install stage systems at over 400 shows across a wide-ranging touring roster.

More impressive than the sheer numbers of shows are the technical and engineering innovations, logistical achievements and bespoke solutions created.

Combined, these factors have led to overwhelming positive feedback, demonstrating that Stageco has regularly exceeded the expectations of clients and their audiences.

The Stageco Group has expanded to 166 full time inscribed employees in 2006. During the busiest periods this was swelled by freelancers to over 500 people; building, driving, dismantling and supporting the company’s experienced project managers though the twists and turns of the ever-challenging tour schedules.

In addition to the specifically built stages for these high profile shows, Stageco supplied over 250 stages of all sizes to all kinds of event from the company’s range of ‘standard stages’.

Stageco’s international infrastructure expanded its network in 2006 with the opening of a new office in Vienna, and the acquisition of All-Stage in Belgium, to focus more on these local markets.
They’re still the biggest rock’n’roll band in the world; a fact confirmed when the Bigger Bang tour was recently confirmed as the “top-grossing tour ever", grossing an incredible $437 million.

Since the tour began in August 2005, the band has drawn 3.5 million people to 113 shows, according to Billboard Boxscore. In addition, an estimated crowd of two million saw the band perform at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro in February 2006.

The Bigger Bang touring stage was designed by the Mark Fisher Studio, which liaised with Stageco throughout the process of turning visualisations into a practical touring system.

Three stage sets were manufactured to fulfil the global tour schedule, based around Stageco’s tower and trusses system, with a scaffolding and deck and floor system.

The base structure, balconies (accommodating 400 VIP members of the audience within the stage), stairways, lift and tusk arm elements of the stage were all tailor made in Stageco’s Belgian fabrication facility.

This created a 62 metre wide by 27 metre deep by 26 metre high structure that required 34 articulated trailers to transport the steelwork of each of the three sets.

Stageco’s project management teams from Belgium and the USA were joined by local Stageco staff in each different region to construct the stage.

The logistics for this already complex tour were further complicated by the rescheduling of the European leg following Keith Richards’s unfortunate fall from a coconut tree.
Stageco supply he stages for the extended U2 Vertigo World tour.

The Vertigo tour began in Europe in 2005 and moved on to the United States, Mexico, South America and Japan in 2006.

The band postponed the Australian leg of the tour following family issues, and once again appointed Stageco to supply the staging for the rescheduled dates, along with an additional farewell show in Honolulu.

Stageco has enjoyed a strong relationship with the Irish rock impresarios, having supplied staging for the previous Pop Mart and Zooropa tours. So the company was delighted to be invited by the band’s production manager, Jake Berry, to supply the staging for the whole of the Vertigo tour.

Stageco constructed six copies of the stage at their Belgian head office facility, manufactured to the design specifications of Mark Fischer Studio. It incorporated the Tait Towers set with two towers supporting the PA and high resolution video screens, plus a low density curved video wall.

In all the stage measured an impressive 60 metres (frontage), 23 metres (high) and 20 metres deep. Each stage consisted of 13 trailers of steel structures, built in under two days and dismantled after the show within one day.

Robbie Williams’s 2006 world tour began in Dublin this June, taking in 19 venues around Europe (40 shows) before moving on for four South American shows in October and finally onto Australia and New Zealand for the final nine shows.

It was the fastest selling ticket of 2006, with all three million tickets sold in a month.

Always one to put on a spectacular visual show for his fans, Robbie’s stage show was performed on a Mark Fischer Studio design, incorporating over 300 metres of video wall, 2,000 lights and a stadium PA supported by a Stageco steel structure.

The bespoke 58 metre by 24 metre by 23 metre structure was based around the Stageco ‘Tower & Truss’ and floor system (scaffolding & decks), with a tailor-made base structure, tusk structures, top walkways and stairs. Stageco produced two sets that each required 14 trailers of steelwork and a dozen Stageco crew.

As the tour progressed, Robbie added a final show in Dublin where he played for 80,000 people, with Stageco rescheduling an already complex logistical operation.

Millions of rock fans were singing some of rock music’s best known anthems in front of Stageco’s custom build touring stage on Bon Jovi’s 2006 Have a Nice Day tour.

While fans filled three sides of 21 sold out stadium concerts, the fourth side was taken by the band and their Spike Lloyd-designed set, supported on a 54 metre wide, 18 metre deep, 20 metre high Stageco structure (Towers & Trusses) and floor system (scaffolding & decks) with tailor-made top structure trusses, facia panels and band “roofette”.

Stageco built three sets, each requiring 10 crew (two from Stageco Germany, one from Belgium, partially replaced by US crew in the US), with a total of 30 trailers of equipment on the road for the tour.

Bon Jovi did a complete trial build at Stageco’s Tildonk yard for 10 days, with a 24/7 schedule for programming the video and lights.

During the “Touring The Angel” 2005/6 World Tour, Depeche Mode played to more than 2.5 million people in 31 countries at all sizes of venue in support of their latest album ‘Playing the Angel’.

The importance of the live show was underlined by the fact that the band recorded and mixed each show to create a unique high-quality CD that captured the Depeche Mode live experience.

Stageco built a three-tower roof stage system for the larger shows at eight of the European venues and some festivals during June and July. Two sets were required to fulfil the touring schedule, with Stageco’s Germany office staff looking after the six trailers’-worth of steelwork per stage.

Stageco supplied stages for eight of the shows. The rest were festivals where staging was already in place.

Johnny Hallyday is one of France's biggest stars. He’s performed 400 tours to 15 million people over the years and has 18 platinum albums, as well as selling 100 millions discs since the beginning of his career.

Despite Hallyday remaining largely unknown outside France and other French-speaking countries, he is still considered France's number-one singer and is seen as a top stage performer.

The tour started in the winter – mainly at indoor venues. Come the summer, he packed seven venues across Switzerland and France.

For the 2006 tour, Stageco supplied a four-tower roof system for seven venues in France as well as some of the festivals where Hallyday was appearing.

In all, eight trailers of steelwork of per set (three sets were dispatched on the road) were constructed and dismantled by Stageco Belgium + France crews.
Stageco became a favourite among international football supporters when Stageco’s German office supplied a range of structures for the 2006 World Cup through June and July.

Before a ball was kicked, Stageco supplied three stages with roofs for a series of orchestral concerts to entertain the fans arriving in Germany in advance of the tournament.

Most notably, a giant Stageco Arch Roof (38,29x 30,5x 19,6) located in the Olympic stadium in Munich hosted a concert by Placido Domingo, the prodigy piano player Lang Lang and many more, conducted by the best known conductors in the world like Zubin Mehta or Christian Thielemann attended by the Bavarian state orchestra, the Munich philharmonic orchestra and the symphony orchestra of the Bavarian broadcast.
The opening ceremony took place on the pitch immediately prior to the first match of the tournament.

Stars like Seeed and Herbert Grönemeyer, Pelé, Franz Beckenbauer and Joseph Blatter appeared on an 80m² Stage (also tailor- made) in the centre of the pitch, and the German Stageco team scored well when they removed all the equipment in the allotted one minutes for the opening match to begin on time.

While the players battled on the pitch, Stageco provided structures around the grounds, enhancing the World Cup experience for hospitably ticket holders and for those fans who couldn’t get tickets for the action.

The company supplied nine big screen supports for ‘fan fests’ outside stadiums for supporters (five tower constructions, four scaffolding constructions). These screens were ‘live’ throughout the tournament to make it possible for fans without tickets to watch the matches.
Sponsorship and corporate hospitality are now an important commercial aspect of any major tournament and Stageco supported several brands in their presentations at the World Cup.

In Berlin, the Coca Cola Pavilion was a tailor- made TV studio, while a circular stage was provided to the Yahoo sponsor pavilion where fans had free web access and Stageco built a Mastercard sponsor tower with full branding for hospitality.
It was the biggest opening ceremony for a Winter Olympic Games and Stageco was entrusted with the structures.

Unlike the rock’n’roll touring timetable, which takes three days to build and two days to load-out, a show of this magnitude required Stageco to work alongside a complex network of suppliers and be on site for three months, taking into account stringent local health and safety procedures.

The Stageco Belgium office fulfilled the project, starting the build in November 2005, ready for the first of three shows; the opening ceremony on 10 February, the closing ceremony on the 26 February and the opening of the Para Olympics on 10 March.

Stageco supplied an elaborate tailor-made roof and bridge construction that required very intensive labour; the Olympic rings support structures (Towers & Trusses); PA and light portals (Tower & Truss constructions) which were installed in January ready for rehearsals.

Video screen supports were supplied by the Stageco France office in the main stadium and in the mountains so that fans could follow the action.
Stageco US supplied the stage for the free show to commemorate the opening match of the NFL season in September, which this year was between the Pitsburg Steelers and the Miami Dolphins.

Among the artists were Diddy (AKA Puff Daddy) Rascal and Cassie, performing on a specially built stage and production (with barriers) located on the sand of South Beach, Miami.

Stageco supplied a four-tower stage with a Micro Arch 4 roof (seven arches).

Stageco closed a sporting year by supplying structures to the Asian Games in Qatar.

The Belgian office supplied 32 tailor-made banner towers to eight locations around the games’ site and Stageco towers at the entrance of the main stadium.

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