1. Client at a Glance
Project Detail | Description |
|---|---|
Client | Montreal Chinese Cultural Arts Foundation & Canada Xianlong Group |
Industry | Cultural Event / Public Festival |
Event Type | 7-Week Outdoor Lantern Carnival (Sep–Oct 2019) |
Project Scale | 27,000 sqm at Park Jean-Drapeau |
Project Timeline | Full event run: 7 weeks |
2. The Challenge: Introducing an Unknown Art Form to a New Audience
Montreal had never hosted a lantern carnival before. The organizing team—the Montreal Chinese Cultural Arts Foundation and Canada Xianlong Group—had a bold vision: transform 27,000 square meters of a public park into an immersive Chinese cultural experience. But they faced two significant barriers.
First, local audiences had no prior exposure to lantern art. There was no existing cultural reference point, no built-in curiosity to tap into. The event had to create demand from scratch—educating, attracting, and entertaining simultaneously.
Second, the organizers themselves had no prior experience running an event of this type. A lantern carnival at this scale—with large installations, outdoor nighttime operations, and a multi-week run—required specialized knowledge that their team was building in real time.

3. The Solution: Building a Cultural Journey Through Themed Zones
To address both the awareness gap and the organizers' inexperience, the project was structured around a simple, powerful idea: guide visitors through a narrative, not just a collection of installations.
Design Decision 1: A Grand Entrance That Commands Attention
The carnival entrance was designed as a 10-meter-high, 15-meter-wide Chinese Lanterns archway featuring traditional "two dragons playing with a pearl" motifs. This wasn't just a doorway—it was a statement. Visible from outside the park, it signaled to passersby that something remarkable was happening inside. The scale was deliberate: the entrance had to convert curiosity into footfall before visitors even bought a ticket.
Design Decision 2: Themed Zones That Reward Exploration
Rather than distributing installations evenly, the park was divided into themed zones—each centered on a different aspect of Chinese mythology and traditional architecture. This created a "step-by-step scene" progression that rewarded visitors for exploring the entire space. A hand-painted lantern corridor with 180 individually decorated pieces provided an intimate, photo-friendly contrast to the grander installations, ensuring the experience worked at multiple scales.
Design Decision 3: A Landmark Installation as the Ultimate Destination
At the far end of the park, an 80-meter-long, 15-meter-high installation depicting ancient Chinese imperial architecture served as the carnival's climax. Its scale made it unmissable, and its position at the end of the visitor journey ensured guests moved through the entire event space—maximizing exposure to every zone and extending dwell time naturally.

The result was not just a display of Event Decorations, but a coherent cultural journey that guided visitors from curiosity to wonder.
4. Measurable Results
The carnival ran for seven weeks and achieved outcomes that set a new benchmark for cultural events in Montreal:
Attendance: 80,000 visitors over the seven-week run, according to event organizers
Revenue: $4.2 million in direct ticket revenue, excluding food and beverage and other value-added income, as reported by the organizing foundation
Social sharing: Over 120,000 social media shares, making the carnival one of Montreal's most talked-about cultural events that autumn
5. Client Feedback
Ms. Huang Xianshu, founder of the Montreal Chinese Cultural Arts Foundation, shared her personal connection to the project:
"Bringing Chinese intangible cultural heritage to Montreal has been my dream. These Zigong lanterns showcase China's strength and beauty during the 70th anniversary of China's founding and Mid-Autumn Festival."
The event also resonated with local influencers. Blogger Sarra Bemri described the experience:
"This event promises to entertain you all night—just take time to admire each sculpture. The Asian-inspired stalls are a nice touch too; you'll want to stay until closing!"
(Ms. Huang's comment from public media coverage. Blogger comment from public social media post.)
6. Behind the Scenes: Coordinating Quality Across an Unfamiliar Event Format
The polished photos don't show what it took to help an inexperienced organizing team deliver a seven-week cultural event.
Quality Control with On-Site Expertise: A visual design expert from the production team conducted on-site inspections of each installation group, verifying artistic integrity and technical safety. For the organizers, who were managing this type of event for the first time, having embedded expertise on the ground provided both quality assurance and operational confidence.
Installation Coordination Across Teams: Large-scale pieces—particularly the mythical beast installations—required precise coordination between the production crew and local Montreal staff. Structural stability had to be verified for each piece before public access, and the installation sequence had to account for the park's public access schedule.


7. Let's Discuss a Similar Solution for Your Event
If you're planning a cultural event—whether launching in a new market, educating an unfamiliar audience, or working with a first-time organizing team—we'd welcome the chance to discuss how custom installations could work for your venue and audience.
Use the following ways to contact us:
WhatsApp: +86-18008353905 | Email: store@lanternsart.com | Let's discuss a similar solution for your event
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