Schneider Electric EcoStruxure Innovation Center — Corporate Showroom Photography

Client: Schneider Electric
Industry: Energy Management / Industrial Automation
Scope: Corporate Photography, Showroom & Experience Center Documentation
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Year: 2019
The Client
Schneider Electric is a global leader in energy management and industrial automation, operating in over 100 countries with annual revenues exceeding €28 billion. Their EcoStruxure platform — an IoT-enabled architecture — powers smart buildings, data centers, infrastructure, and industrial operations worldwide. The Istanbul EcoStruxure Innovation Center serves as a regional flagship showroom: a live demonstration environment where clients, partners, and industry leaders experience Schneider’s integrated technology ecosystem firsthand.
The Challenge
Competing Light Sources
The Innovation Center was designed to impress — which meant an environment built around dynamic LED panels, interactive touchscreens, backlit product displays, and atmospheric architectural lighting. Every surface had its own light source competing for dominance. Achieving balanced exposures that honored the designed atmosphere without blown highlights or crushed shadows required constant metering adjustments and HDR bracketing across zones.
Screen and Display Integration
Live technology demos were running throughout the shoot. Screens displaying EcoStruxure dashboards, energy monitoring interfaces, and animated data visualizations needed to appear sharp and readable — not washed out or motion-blurred — while the surrounding environment remained properly exposed. This required precise shutter speed calibration to the display refresh rates.
Corporate Brand Compliance
Schneider Electric’s global visual identity standards are uncompromising. Every image needed to align with their brand guidelines: specific color temperatures, product visibility requirements, and compositional standards for international marketing use. Pre-shoot coordination with the communications team defined a detailed shot list covering every zone of the center.
Operational Access
The center remained open to client visits during the documentation. Coordinating around scheduled demonstrations, VIP visits, and staff movement — without disrupting business operations — required flexible scheduling and rapid repositioning between setups.
Our Approach
Zone-by-Zone Lighting Strategy
Rather than attempting uniform lighting across the full space, we mapped the center into distinct zones — each with its own exposure profile. Ambient-only setups preserved the designed atmosphere in display areas; subtle supplementary lighting was introduced only where product detail required it, positioned to avoid reflections on screens and glass surfaces.
Display Synchronization
All screen-heavy compositions were shot at shutter speeds matched to the Hz frequency of each display type, eliminating flicker and ensuring dashboard content read cleanly in final images. Where multiple display types coexisted, exposure sequences were tested and locked before committing to final frames.
Shot List Execution
A pre-approved shot list aligned with Schneider’s global communications team ensured full coverage: entry and reception, product demo stations, EcoStruxure command center mock-up, collaborative meeting zones, and detail shots of hardware and interface elements. Delivery was organized by zone for direct handoff to their marketing department.
Minimal Footprint Operations
Working with a lean kit — no large light stands, no equipment blocking visitor pathways — allowed us to maintain a near-invisible presence while the center operated normally around us.
Deliverables
Showroom Photography: Full zone-by-zone coverage of the EcoStruxure Innovation Center.
Product & Technology Detail: Close-up documentation of hardware, interfaces, and interactive elements.
Architectural Stills: Wide and medium environmental shots for press and marketing use.
Brand-Compliant Selects: Edited and color-graded final images delivered to Schneider Electric’s global specifications.
Technical Specifications
| Client | Schneider Electric |
| Location | Istanbul, Turkey |
| Year | 2019 |
| Environment | Corporate showroom / experience center |
| Lighting Challenge | Dynamic LED, live screens, mixed ambient |
| Deliverables | Corporate photography, brand-compliant selects |
| Usage | Global marketing, press, internal communications |
Why This Matters
Technology showrooms are among the most technically demanding interior environments to photograph. The lighting is intentional, layered, and optimized for human presence — not cameras. Getting it right requires more than photographic skill; it requires understanding how the space was designed to communicate, and translating that intent into images that work across all media.
Schneider Electric needed a photographer who could deliver to global brand standards, work invisibly within an active business environment, and solve display synchronization challenges without technical compromise. That’s the intersection where we operate. Explore our full range of corporate photography services or see more in our case studies.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. We plan shoots around operational schedules and work with a minimal equipment footprint, allowing normal business activity to continue. For corporate showrooms we typically identify low-traffic windows for hero shots while maintaining flexibility for coverage during operational hours.
We calibrate shutter speeds to match display refresh rates — typically 1/50s or 1/100s for European Hz standards — which eliminates flicker. Positioning and polarizing filters manage reflections on glass-fronted displays. Each screen type in the environment is tested individually before final capture.
Routinely. For corporate clients like Schneider Electric, we receive and review brand guidelines before the shoot, collaborate on shot list development with communications teams, and deliver images organized by zone or usage category for direct integration into their workflows.
Experience centers are designed for performance, not photography. Every element — lighting, layout, materials — is optimized for live human interaction. Translating that into static images requires reverse-engineering the designer’s intent while solving technical challenges that don’t exist in conventional interiors: mixed light sources, active screens, and highly reflective surfaces.
Yes. While we’re based in Madrid, we’ve documented corporate facilities, industrial sites, and branded environments across Europe and internationally. For projects requiring travel, we handle full logistics coordination and can integrate with local production resources where needed.






