When an event reflects its destination
Some events could happen anywhere.
Others could only happen in Mauritius.
At Paradis Hotel, Impact Production Group (IPG) was entrusted with more than technical installation. The mission was deeper:
To implement an immersive environment, designed by Move For Art, that felt rooted in place; modern, architectural, technological; yet unmistakably Mauritian.
This was not about building a dome.
The illuminated Dodo: a symbol, not a prop
Along the water’s edge stood a series of illuminated Dodo sculptures, outlined in vibrant LED, bold yet refined.
They were not decorative fillers.
They were cultural anchors.
Positioned beside the pool, the Dodos reflected across the surface, doubling their presence and grounding the entire experience in Mauritian heritage.
For hotels and event planners, the insight is powerful: When design references local identity with intention, the event gains authenticity without excess.
The lighting did not overwhelm. It framed a story.
Light as architecture: the Monstera bar
The strip LED Monstera installation at the bar transformed a functional zone into a visual magnet.
Bars are where conversations gather.
Energy builds.
Photos are taken.
By sculpting the bar with illuminated tropical leaf lines, IPG created:
- A tropical-modern aesthetic
- A strong visual focal point
- A photo-friendly social hub
- A seamless integration between décor and lighting
This is how lighting becomes structural.
It defines space.
The dome, the tunnel, the flow
Yes; there was a dome structure.
A large truss dome connected to a smaller dome through a tunnel, creating spatial continuity rather than separation.
But the real strength was not the structure itself.
It was the flow.
Guests transitioned through the tunnel before entering the main immersive zone. That subtle shift created anticipation; a psychological reset before immersion.
Temporary structures, when engineered correctly, don’t feel temporary.
They feel intentional.
Curved LED screens: softening technology
Instead of traditional rectangular screens, IPG engineered three arched LED screens echoing organic curvature.
This mattered.
Curves soften digital presence.
They align with architectural lines.
They reduce visual harshness.
The screens integrated rather than dominated.
This is how event production in Mauritius reaches international luxury standards; through detail and restraint.
Projection under the dome: using the ceiling
Under the dome roof, projection mapping added a subtle atmospheric layer.
Rather than confining visuals to eye-level, the experience extended upward.
Guests were surrounded; not confronted.
Projection becomes powerful when it enhances architecture rather than competes with it.
The real subject: integrated design thinking
This event was not about:
- A dome
- LED lighting
- Screens
- Projection
It was about integration.
Every element responded to:
- The hotel environment
- The Mauritian identity
- Guest flow
- Reflection
- Social interaction
Nothing felt isolated.
Everything felt connected.
A solution for hotels and event companies
If you want your event to feel premium without being excessive:
Stop asking: “What structure can we add?”
Start asking: “What identity are we expressing?”
Then layer:
- Cultural symbolism
- Reflective positioning
- Social focal points
- Architectural lighting
- Integrated visual technology
Coherence creates impact.
Why IPG builds environments, not installations
At Impact Production Group, event production is not about placing equipment.
It is about designing environments that:
- Respect location
- Elevate brand
- Enhance guest emotion
- Integrate technology seamlessly
At Paradis Hotel, the result was an event that could only exist here; in Mauritius.
And that is the difference.
Planning a high-end event in Mauritius?
Looking for immersive event production, architectural LED integration, projection mapping, and culturally intelligent design?
Let Impact Production Group design your space with identity and intention.