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Would that be architectural lighting or architectural lighting? (MAGAZINE)
Conflicting usage of the term architectural lighting has been on the rise in the industry, and perhaps it's time to settle on a single meaning.
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This article was published in the June 2012 issue of LEDs Magazine.

View the Table of Contents and download the PDF file of the complete June 2012 issue, or view the E-zine version in your browser.

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Excuse me if I don’t understand the difference between architectural lighting and architectural lighting. I’m relatively new to the lighting industry having only covered it for the last few years with LEDs coming to the fore as a light source. I’ve spent far more of my career focused on the electronics industry.

Still, I thought I understood that architectural lighting referred to lighting on the outside of buildings, bridges, and other structures. We’ve covered such lighting regularly as LEDs have shown brightly in such applications. Indeed solid-state lighting (SSL) brings energy efficiency to such applications, and can easily include dynamic control and full-color capabilities when fixtures are equipped with red, green, and blue (RGB) LEDs. There is a good example of architectural lighting on our cover with the blue light cast by RGB fixtures on the Recouvrance Bridge lift towers in Brest, France (also see page 19).

But do I really understand the meaning of architectural lighting? Back in February at the Strategies in Light (SIL) Conference, I was in attendance at the LEDs in Lighting track. Sarena McComas and Jennifer Rueth, partners at lighting design firm Type A Productions, discussed an SSL project at a Marriott hotel in Indianapolis (www.ledsmagazine.com/features/9/3/5). McComas at one point used the term architectural lighting. But she was discussing indoor downlights.

When I heard McComas use the term architectural lighting, I wasn’t exactly sure of the meaning. But the context of the presentation led me to believe she just meant lighting fixtures that were perhaps specified by a building architect. But I heard the term used relative to indoor lighting a couple of other times at the conference. Meanwhile, SIL also included a tutorial entitled “Architectural lighting design with LEDs” that was clearly focused on lighting the outside of structures.

I had not given the ambiguity much thought until recently. But lately we’ve been preparing to launch a new lighting-centric magazine called Illumination in Focus (www.illuminationinfocus.com). I was working on a taxonomy for the site and thought about the ambiguous use of architectural lighting and how we should handle it.

Then Cree Lighting announced some indoor fixtures the week before Lightfair (page 9). And they explicitly referred to one of the downlights as targeting architectural lighting applications. I asked Cree about the meaning. It seems in indoor cases, architectural lighting can refer to a premium product. Architectural-grade products are presumably a cut above contractor-grade products. It seems that architectural grade is used synonymously with specification grade.

Who knew? Maybe a lot of you but not me. I’d certainly like to hear from you on the topic. I’ll post a discussion in our LinkedIn LEDs and Lighting group (http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=2443165) once this issue is out, and hopefully allow some of you to address the ambiguity. From the standpoint of a taxonomy or a topic center on a website, it seems to me to be a fairly major problem with loads of opportunity to confuse readers. I’d certainly like to see the industry choose one meaning or the other.

Back to the cover, we on the staff were especially fond of the photo of the Brest bridge. And it’s a neat outdoor lighting project. An old bridge with new LED lighting is once again a proud architectural landmark.

About the Author 
Maury Wright is the Editor of LEDs Magazine.
COMMENTS
Name: darklight   Posted: Wed, 06 Jun 2012 22:06
I would say that this is one of the challenges of the mashing up of the electronics and traditional lighting industries. As an architectural lighting designer (I use that term to differentiate myself from theatrical lighting designers), I use the terms "architectural lighting," "electric lighting," and "daylighting" all the time. Architectural lighting is, to me, the lighting of architectural forms and surfaces, whether they are inside or outside...
Name: liteonled   Posted: Thu, 07 Jun 2012 02:06
We agree with CREE, we also market an "architectural product" which we consider refers to the creative use of LED strip lighting and a "premium product" line, usually LED down lights, which has greater design quality, aesthetics and options with respect to shapes, size and materials, and then of course luminosity, CRI and colour temperature. LED technology has certainly a new dimension to architectural lighting. However, of course there is a lot more to architectural lighting than just a product line, rather it is more about the use of light in design to highlight good architecture and to create a certain atmosphere and experience. I think van Uffelen's book Light in Architecture (2012) is probably a good recent reference source. www.liteonled.com
Name: doug macdonald   Posted: Wed, 13 Jun 2012 22:06
I've always assumed architectural lighting to mean any lighting that's permanently attached to the building or site. As opposed to theatrical lighting, special event lighting, exhibit lighting (including museum lighting, and other temporary lighting (such as table & floor lamps). Also excluded would be installations like roadway or parking-lot lighting, landscape lighting, and other lighting that doesn't exist to light a structure.
June 2012
June 2012
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Architectural Lighting
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Maury Wright
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