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ome," wrote Channing Pollock, "is the most popular, and will be the most enduring of all earthly establishments." Olevia International Group LLC took that advice to heart for its exhibit at the 2008 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. When the Los Angeles-based maker of high-definition (HD) televisions wanted to increase booth traffic over the previous year's CES, it knew its exhibit would somehow have to stand out from the sensory storm of 2,700 other booths.

But instead of yet another exhibit blinking and buzzing with grand-mal intensity, Olevia constructed a home as real as any a Century 21 agent might show. With the aid of San Francisco-based Immersa Marketing Inc., Olevia positioned a pre-fab home inside its 50-by-80-foot space. The California-modern house featured a covered patio area and a 15-foot-high palm tree, which rose up through an opening in the home's cantilevered roof. Visible over the show floor, the towering palm signaled to attendees like a semaphore that here was an asylum from the cacophony of CES.

Visitors entered the five-room house through a slate patio, set in a yard covered with a 2-inch-thick faux-grass carpet. Once inside, they toured bedrooms, a living room, a bathroom, and a kitchen outfitted with Olevia's HD TVs running movies such as "Shrek." Cozily lit with halogens and floor lamps, each room featured homey touches, including 1950s-sleek couches, tables, and chairs. After the tour, attendees and staff met on the lawn, surrounded by ficus, maple trees, and hedges of horsetail, to discuss the company's products.

By creating this hushed habitat, Olevia doubled its exhibit traffic from the previous year, well above its goal of a 10- to 20-percent increase. Ultimately, the exhibit proved that even amid the modern marvels on display at CES, there's still no place like home. e


Home Sweet Home
Designed by Immersa Marketing Inc. and built by Manhattan Beach, CA-based Logical Homes LLC, this pre-fab home was the undeniable focal point of Olevia International Group LLC's 50-by-80-foot space. Made from two 40-foot-long shipping containers with glass walls enclosing the living room, the honest-to-goodness abode offered a fitting context for Olevia's HD TVs displayed throughout.

Client: Olevia International Group LLC, Los Angeles
Design: Immersa Marketing Inc., San Francisco
Fabrication: Logical Homes LLC, Manhattan Beach, CA
Size: 50-by-80-feet (4,000 square feet)
Estimated Cost: $250,000
Estimated Cost/Square Foot: $63



Charles Pappas, senior writer; [email protected]
Padgett and Co. Inc. is an exhibit- and architectural-photography firm based in Chicago.

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