Singapore Parliament Selects Lawo AOIP For Major Broadcast Facility Upgrade

Mediacorp staff attending online training with Lawo's Frank Mosch.
Parliaments around the world have come to trust in Lawo Audio-over-IP technology for critical audio infrastructure. The latest to choose Lawo solutions is the Parliament of Singapore, which recently conducted a major technical upgrade, installing modern Lawo technology in its broadcast facilities.
The Singapore Parliament’s Lawo installation includes a compact 32-fader mc²36MkII all-in-one audio console, powered by IP-native A__UHD technology, with A__stage48 and A__stage64 AoIP nodes integrated into the system as stageboxes.
These standards-based products support ST2110-30/31 as well as RAVENNA/AES67 AoIP, and provide redundant fail-safe operation using the SMPTE2022-7 standard.
Based on Lawo’s HOME management platform for IP-based media infrastructures, which is natively built on a cloud-ready microservices architecture, this installation enables users to connect, manage and secure networked setups, with centralized access and control of all connected Lawo equipment. Security is particularly important for the Parliament, and HOME provides a variety of security strategies, the first of which is quarantining unknown devices. Only after being deliberately approved via an intuitive IEEE802.1X-based routine, can connected devices begin exchanging signals within the HOME network. For even more security, HOME uses an authentication strategy based on a centralized user management system, with dedicated user roles and groups.
A paramount consideration during the modernization project was ensuring that the audio mixing system provides high flexibility and can be integrated into a remote production infrastructure. Setups which integrate with distant venues have become particularly important during the pandemic in order to practice safe social distancing during parliamentary working routines. The technical specifications and ease of connecting to Singapore’s national media network, Mediacorp, were instrumental in the purchase and installation of the Lawo mc²36MkII console as the central element of the parliament’s audio infrastructure.
Because the Singapore Parliament project was carried out during the pandemic, training and configuration support were done during online remote sessions. Lawo’s Frank Mosch conducted technical pre-project discussions so that MediaCorp and systems integrator Broadcast Communications International Pte Ltd could finalize the system’s design and interconnectivity in a smooth, unified workflow. Training during project installation and completion, including assistance in minor system adjustment during T&C, were also carried out online.
The Singapore Parliament project was carried out between October and Christmas 2021. The first seating of Parliament using the new Lawo broadcast infrastructure took place during January 3 – January 5, 2022, with a perfect, error-free debut.
“We are proud and honored by the trust the Singapore Parliament has given our products and solutions for this major modernization — the introduction of IP technology using Lawo broadcast equipment,” says Boon Siong Tan, Lawo’s Sales Director, S.E. Asia, India & Radio (APAC).
You might also like...
Generative AI & Content Recommendation
Many major broadcasters are at least investigating how Generative AI can enhance content recommendation, partly by exploiting the ability to combine attributes across video, audio, text and graphics. These are early days though, with research still being conducted by universities…
BEIT Conference Sessions At NAB 2025 Report - Part 1
The BEITC conference sessions at the 2025 NAB Show were varied and fascinating. Here our transmission specialist Ned Soseman summarizes his pick of the sessions of most relevance to the US broadcast market.
Authenticity And Trust In Media
Our resident digital philosopher Dave Shapton asks us all to consider whether we know what is real and how much we value authenticity.
Monitoring & Compliance In Broadcast: File Based Monitoring In Production Systems
File based monitoring tools sit at the heart of broadcast workflow. As production requirements evolve to embrace remote production and multi-site teams, such systems must also evolve to meet the new challenges.
Content Steering Goes Mainstream After Standardization
Tests have confirmed that content steering will boost performance and resilience of multi-CDN delivery networks. Following standardization by the DASH Industry Forum and then ETSI, it is becoming integral to streaming infrastructures, working autonomously and upgraded transparently in the field.