AV for community spaces that serve everyone
Libraries, community centres, museums, council chambers and civic facilities serve diverse audiences with diverse needs — from children's interactive programs to public meetings, film screenings to emergency announcements. The AV systems in these spaces need to be versatile, simple to operate by non-technical staff, and reliable enough that a community program isn't disrupted by a technical failure. Masters Voice Technology has delivered AV for council and community facilities across NSW.
Our work at Oran Park Library for Camden Council demonstrates what modern public facility AV looks like when it's designed thoughtfully. The installation combined an Epson 13,000-lumen laser projector for the main presentation space, Yamaha VXL line array speakers for consistent audio coverage, interactive Epson projectors in workshop areas, and EyeClick interactive floor technology in the children's area — all integrated into a single control platform that library staff manage without technical support.
What we deliver for public and community facilities
Our public and community AV capability covers library and community centre multipurpose AV including projection, audio and display systems, council chamber PA, recording and broadcast systems, interactive display and engagement installations, digital signage for public information and wayfinding, outdoor PA and event AV for public spaces and amphitheatres, museum and gallery AV including audio guides and exhibit interactives, and TechFlow360 managed service agreements for ongoing support without internal technical resource.
Designing for public use
Public facility AV has to be designed for the lowest common denominator of technical confidence — because the person operating it on any given day may be a casual staff member or a volunteer with no AV background. Every system we install in a public facility is commissioned with simple, clearly labelled interfaces and documented operating procedures. We design for the user, not the engineer.


