Be the Next Birdman

A Swiss flight simulator at the Museum of the Moving Image takes you to greater altitudes.

It鈥檚 my turn. I climb onto a wooden T-shaped table, padded with red cushions, and lie face down. My arms make acute angles at my sides and my palms are pressed to the wood. It鈥檚 tricky to locate two red 鈥渇ly鈥 buttons with my thumbs as a headset weighs heavy on my face, displaying an idle screen. I鈥檓 already one step displaced from reality. My thumbs soon discover, then squeeze, the red triggers that cue the visuals and the sounds. Seamlessly, the clunky accessories fade. I look to my left and see only an open sky and one downy wing, coffee tinted and flapping in wind. I can feel a breeze and hear the papery hiss of feathers. When I tilt my wings up, I ascend. When I press down, I dive alarmingly fast. At one point, I forget to flap and plunge toward the edge of the Chrysler Building and a crowded freeway. But in no time, the veers and pivots and dips all seem intuitive, almost like I鈥檝e been flying my whole life.

This is reality鈥攐r simulated reality, at least. I鈥檓 connected to , a new flight simulator that enables its pilots to imitate an elegant bird of prey, the . Along with the simulator鈥檚 aerial views and audio to recreate the sound of wind, touch technology reacts to the precise pressure and tilt of a user鈥檚 hands and arms鈥斺渁llowing you to fully embody a bird,鈥 says Michel Zai, a media artist and Birdly鈥檚 CEO.                                                                   

This mock bird鈥檚-eye view is currently on display in New York City at the Museum of the Moving Image鈥檚 innovative new exhibit: 鈥淪ensory Stories.鈥 Other features include 鈥渆ar cones鈥 that summon voices from the walls, erotic rhythm devices, and paintings that mimic the viewers鈥 facial expressions. It鈥檚 the culmination of years of advanced technology, says Charles Melcher, the founder and director of g, which organized the exhibit.                                                                             

But of all these Sensory Stories, Birdly is the centerpiece, currently standing in the museum鈥檚 main lobby: the first thing you see when you enter. The simulator originally hatched in Zurich, Switzerland, in 2013 when the local BirdLife conservation organization asked media artist Max Rheiner to create something for its anniversary exhibition that would tap peoples鈥 fascination with flight. Flying is one of the oldest dreams of human kind,鈥 say Zai, who works for Somniacs, the company Rheiner recently founded. Touting all of its sensory bells and whistles, Birdly comes close to making this universal fantasy come true.

But there is one glitch that might irk bird lovers. 鈥淭hey modeled a European bird over an American city?鈥 UK ornithologist Ian Carter asks me as I recap my experience to him over the phone. Carter has studied European birds of prey for more than 20 years. Indeed, Birdly mimics the Red Kite, the graceful raptor that commands the skies between Spain, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom. 鈥淵ou would never see one flying in Manhattan,鈥 Carter says. (To be fair, Birdly was over Zurich鈥檚 rolling hills, farmlands, and forest. It was only later reimagined across metropolises like San Francisco and Manhattan for the American audience.)

Otherwise, Birdly serves as an engrossing and believable multi-sensory storyteller. Soon, a tiny attachable device will even spew puffs of fragrant alcohols to enhance the urban narrative鈥攕moke and asphalt, as well as a more pleasant sea mist.

Though the Birdly experience strives for the clouds, it may also be mobilizing tangible, on-the-ground conservation: One of the simulator鈥檚 three prototypes is nestled in a small bird reserve near Zurich, and is drawing more and more visitors every day, Zai says. 鈥淏irdly makes the reserve a little more attractive to everyone,鈥 and is hopefully amplifying the reserve鈥檚 message on conservation philosophy.

If people experience what it鈥檚 really like to be a bird, Carter says, 鈥渢hey may actually feel more empathy.鈥 In this case, he says, Birdly鈥檚 vivid, audible, tactile, and soon odorous story can only help bring awareness to the magnificence and importance of birds. 

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Birdly is available for your flying pleasure at New York City鈥檚 on Fridays (4-8 p.m.) and Saturdays and Sundays (museum hours) through June 7th, 2015. The exhibit will remain open until July 26th.

Correction: The simulator is Swiss and not German as previously stated in the article.