Aims. We describe the design and first light observations from the β
Pictoris b Ring ("bRing") project. The primary goal is to detect photometric
variability from the young star β Pictoris due to circumplanetary
material surrounding the directly imaged young extrasolar gas giant planet
\bpb. Methods. Over a nine month period centred on September 2017, the Hill
sphere of the planet will cross in front of the star, providing a unique
opportunity to directly probe the circumplanetary environment of a directly
imaged planet through photometric and spectroscopic variations. We have built
and installed the first of two bRing monitoring stations (one in South Africa
and the other in Australia) that will measure the flux of β Pictoris,
with a photometric precision of 0.5% over 5 minutes. Each station uses two
wide field cameras to cover the declination of the star at all elevations.
Detection of photometric fluctuations will trigger spectroscopic observations
with large aperture telescopes in order to determine the gas and dust
composition in a system at the end of the planet-forming era. Results. The
first three months of operation demonstrate that bRing can obtain better than
0.5\% photometry on β Pictoris in five minutes and is sensitive to
nightly trends enabling the detection of any transiting material within the
Hill sphere of the exoplanet