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Travel

Virtual reality app takes tourists back in time

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Timelooper co-founder Yigit Yigiter looks through a Google cardboard virtual reality headset as he views a re-creation of the Great Fire of London in 1666.

LONDON >> Imagine watching frantic shopkeepers busily extinguish the Great Fire of London, or sheltering from Nazi bombing raids during the Blitz.

Now, thanks to a new virtual reality app, you can travel back in time to be immersed in these events.

The Timelooper app allows users to experience key moments in London history with just a smartphone and a cardboard headset.

For example, when Timelooper co-founder Andrew Feinberg visits the Tower of London, a historic castle on the banks of London’s Thames River, he doesn’t queue up with hordes of tourists to catch a glimpse of the royal family’s crown jewels. Instead, he uses Timelooper’s time travel tourism app to experience the tower as it was over 750 years ago, in 1255.

Instead of seeing a busy London tourist site, Feinberg sees a medieval marketplace, a formidable fortress, even an elephant being led down a path.

“We actually overlay the current infrastructure with what the infrastructure of the tower and the surrounding environment was like in 13th-century London,” explained Feinberg. “So for example, now you see a Starbucks, and now you see the tower as it looks today with the moat drained. When we take you back in time, you actually see the historically accurate representation of the tower in its heyday.”

Not far away at St. Paul’s Cathedral, Timelooper users travel back to the Great Fire of London 350 years ago, in 1666. The fire burned for four days, destroying over 13,000 houses.

The smartphone’s built-in motion detection allows time travelers wearing a cardboard headset to move their gaze around the virtual world, seemingly exploring London centuries ago. The videos are location-based, meaning visitors must visit the sites to unlock the historical experiences.

Feinberg and his co-founder, Yigit Yigiter, were frustrated with current tourism technology, which they say hasn’t evolved much since the introduction of audio guides. In 2014 Yigi-ter’s wife brought home a Google cardboard VR headset, and he began thinking about an immersive virtual reality tourism experience. Eventually he quit his job in private equity and moved to the British capital to begin work on the app. The first version was launched in July and featured three sites.

While Timelooper uses VR to offer a unique historical perspective, the technology has been exploding in many directions throughout the tourism industry. Carnival Cruise Line uses it to market cruises, the Dollywood theme park in Tennessee uses it to show off a new roller coaster, and the Seattle Space Needle uses it to help visitors appreciate the view from its sky-high observatory.

Timelooper is a member of the Travel Tech Lab, an incubator space for travel technology startups, partly created by London &Partners, the city’s official promotional company. Following the launch last year, Feinberg and Yigiter were contacted by destinations from China to Spain.

“Nothing replaces the experience of being on-site, but you don’t always know what the stories are about those sights,” Yigiter said.

Timelooper’s travel app is also used by those working in London’s booming tourism industry. Blue Badge tourist guide Ruth Polling pulls out her cardboard headset as she escorts visitors to Trafalgar Square and lets them see what happened on Sept. 23, 1940, when a bomb dropped by Nazi Germany exploded near Nelson’s Column, a famous landmark and iconic part of the victory celebrations held five years later to mark the end of the war in Europe.

“My job is a storyteller,” Polling said. “I’m here to conjure up what things are like, and this just gives me something else I can use, particularly with small children, getting them really engaged.”

Timelooper plans to launch in New York in April, allowing tourists to witness the famous kiss that was photographed in Times Square in August 1945 on VJ Day, the day World War II officially ended with the surrender of Japan, and to see the iconic picture of workers eating lunch atop a skyscraper during construction of the Rockefeller Center in 1932.

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