According to the brand, this digital billboard will be bigger than two tennis courts.

While the concept is similar to screens in London, New York and Dubai, those billboards target pedestrians predominantly. This roadside digital LED is on a bespoke building that has a run-up of more than 800m.

The brand says that the billboard will be impossible to miss.

The LED screen is able to cater for all modern OOH creative techniques, including deep motion and anamorphic 3D. Additionally, the screen can be segmented into smaller panels allowing for the creative use of multiple simultaneous creative displays.

According to the brand, the segmentation is great for campaigns where the brand and product appear together or collaborative campaigns, for example, a network provider and a cellular phone company.

All the traditional OOH metrics are amplified by the combination of the size and positioning of this screen.

"It all adds up to a site with incredible impact. The site ticks every single box, it's unique in the South African context," says Rene Hedley, director of Epic Outdoor.

Hedley adds, "Impact is the measure of how quickly or likely the audience is to receive the campaign message. It can be created by relevance, timing, or in this instance by the sheer scale of the advertising platform."

Hedley says, "It is inconceivable that anyone could ignore a screen of this size for the full duration of the 800m plus run-up, particularly as this stretch of highway is notorious for routinely being highly congested. The dominance of the site creates an impact, thereby virtually guaranteeing higher campaign awareness."

The problems with the growth of OOH and the solution

OOH advertising in South Africa is growing at a rapid rate, says the brand. Since early 2020, approximately 200 new screens have been installed in South Africa — taking the number of roadside LED's to just under 500, with most being installed in Gauteng.

"In 2023 it is set to explode," adds Hedley. "You only have to look at what's happening locally — and the increased adoption in the West — to see how this medium will continue to grow at an increasing rate within South Africa."

While this growth is good for the industry, it raises issues that have up until recently not required attention. Hedley says two specific issues keep arising in the industry:
  1. With so much competition, how do you ensure that your advertising campaign is seen?
  2. There is an ever-increasing frequency of load-shedding and the consequential impact of screen downtime.

According to the brand, to combat the audience dilution that load-shedding creates, the site will be:
  • powered by a large solar farm
  • installed on the property behind the screen, and
  • providing over 95% of all the screens' energy requirements.

This is the first billboard of its type in South Africa to be powered by sustainable energy sources, adds the brand.

"The technology used is of the highest quality, and the board is able to operate very efficiently," says Hedley.

The 830kw of power required per day will be supplied by 270 540-watt panels installed on the large field behind the property. The solar and battery farm will supply 95% of all energy needs (the billboard can draw power from Eskom when required).

"The engineers' drawings have been approved and construction has begun," says Hedley.

"Fabrication of the sub-frame will take a month. In January, N1 motorists will see the face of the building being dismantled and replaced with the new subframe. Once the 40 tech panels have been installed, Epic will begin populating them. Switch-on is scheduled for Wednesday, 1 February 2023," Hedley concludes. 

For more information, visit www.epic-outdoor.co.za. You can also follow Epic Outdoor on Facebook or on Instagram.