Given to all your visitors, the HistoPad digital tablet offers a time travel experience thanks to Augmented Reality and Rich Media including 360° historical reconstructions and 3D interactive objects. Dedicated to intuitively guide all visitors, HistoPad Augmented Visits, available in several major World Heritage sites, enable visitors from all over the world, of all ages and abilities (PRM, audiodescription, FSL), to live an unforgettable and engaging experience. Histovery partnered with more than 17 prestigious cultural sites such as Chambord Castle, the Conciergerie in Paris, the Royal Château of Amboise or the Popes' Palace in Avignon. Our work reaches more than 2 million visitors each year (in 2019).
The HistoPad is also an all-encompassing Analytics and CRM tool, designed to help our cultural partners retain their visitors and attract new audiences.
Histovery has been distinguished by numerous prizes, including ICOM AVICOM Grand Prize, IFCIC « Entreprendre dans la culture » prize, the « Digital Innovation Prize» from BPI, or « Best Cultural Start up » from CFC, among others.
Histovery also creates Augmented Exhibits that combines physical set design and Augmented Reality with HistoPad. The "D-Day: Freedom from Above" HistoPad Augmented Exhibit, which features the Airborne Museum HistoPad content, met a huge success in the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio (the oldest and largest museum of military aviation in the world) and is now displayed at the US Army Airborne & Special Operations Museum in Fayettville, North Carolina. The success of this exhibit led to the production of "Notre-Dame de Paris, the Exhibit", an Augmented Exhibit sponsored exclusively by L’Oréal and in collaboration with Public Institution responsible for the conservation and restoration of Notre-Dame de Paris. An overview of the exhibit was displayed at the France Pavilion of the Dubaï World Expo. It prefigures the augmented exhibition “Notre-Dame de Paris” which will simultaneously take place at the Collège des Bernardins in Paris and in the National Building Museum in spring 2022. This larger exhibition will take visitors on a journey back through the cathedral’s 850-year history and is expected to tour all around the world until the end of Notre-Dame's restoration.