Are Industry Lighting Metrics Fit for Purpose?

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Transcript of Are Industry Lighting Metrics Fit for Purpose?

Are lighting industry

metrics fit for purpose?

Paul Taylor

Dyson

Credit(s) earned on completion of this course will be

reported to AIA CES for AIA members. Certificates of

Completion for both AIA members and non-AIA

members are available upon request.

This course is registered with AIA CES for

continuing professional education. As such, it does

not include content that may be deemed or

construed to be an approval or endorsement by the

AIA of any material of construction or any method or

manner of

handling, using, distributing, or dealing in any

material or product.

___________________________________________

Questions related to specific materials, methods, and services will

be addressed at the conclusion of this presentation.

Abstract

Lighting technology is advancing far faster than the metrics used to

define lighting and we have a rare opportunity to redefine lighting

for the better. In this talk we will dig deep into existing lighting

metrics and regulations and question if they need to change to be

more human centric.

The problems lighting industry metrics and regulations have caused in artificially

lit environments.

How we ‘unlearned’ the importance of natural light.

Why and how some widely used metrics such as UGR (unified glare rating) may

no longer be fit for purpose when using LEDs instead of legacy light sources.

Why designing luminaires for with LEDs requires new optical approaches and

form factors.

Insight into why the lighting industry needs to go beyond technological

improvement and put the human at the centre of lighting design.

Learning points

Spectral

Distribution

Efficiency Glare

Spatial

Distribution

Timing and

Control

Regulations

Lighting Industry Metrics

Thank you

[email protected]

This concludes The American Institute of Architects

Continuing Education Systems Course