Maps for Events

When tens of thousands of people enter the same place, the map becomes part of crowd control. A printed map is already outdated once it leaves the printer, and a PDF is hard to read on a phone in the middle of a queue. Build one map that visitors can open on site, then keep changing booths, entrances, toilets, routes, and service points as the day changes.
  • Update sold-out booths, closed routes, and temporary notices without reprinting anything.
  • Help visitors answer the two questions they ask most: where am I, and where should I go next?
  • Use visible markers and categories to guide people away from crowded areas and toward places they might otherwise miss.

Fuji Rock Festival

Mark the stages, food areas, campsites, shuttle stops, and first-aid points across the site. Attach the day's set times to each stage, then show how long it takes to walk from the stage people are at now to the one they want to reach next.

FAQ

Q. Can the map handle tens of thousands of people opening it at the same time?

Yes. If you expect a sharp traffic spike during entry, a headline performance, or a ticketing window, let us know in advance so we can prepare capacity before the event starts.

Q. If booth or venue information changes during the event, is there still time?

Yes. Edit the content in the admin panel, hit save, and the change takes effect. Visitors keep using the same link, and the next time they open the map they will see the latest version.