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LIGHTING DESING STRATEGIES Light
plays an essential role in our ability to perceive
the world around us; the lighting system plays a critical
role in how we perceive a space and can even influence
how we act in that space. Lighting can affect performance,
mood, morale, safety, security and decisions.
The first step in producing the right lighting design
is to ask what the space is used for. The lighting
designer can then determine quantity of light, color
quality, brightness and direction.
It is beyond the scope of this article to go step
by step through the process of producing a lighting
design. Instead, we will review the several ways that
lighting professionals look at lighting design, from
the simple to the sophisticated.
Simple. One way is to ensure that the lighting system
1) provides ambient illumination for orientation and
general tasks in the space, 2) task illumination for
local, more demanding tasks, and 3) accent illumination
to highlight special objects of interest or to guide
occupants. An example of this scheme is an open office
plan with workstations; we might provide indirect
fixtures to provide ambient illumination, task lighting
at the workstations for work, and accent lighting
to highlight pieces of corporate art on the walls.
Standard. A typical general approach to lighting
design is, after determining how the space is used,
to provide general, localized general, localized and
task illumination to meet these needs. General lighting
provides a generally uniform light level on the workplane
throughout the lighted space. Localized general lighting
is similar but is tailored more to the location of
tasks in the lighted space. Localized lighting, also
called supplemental lighting, is used to provide light
to a specific area. Task lighting delivers light tailored
for a specific task.
Sophisticated. A final way of looking at lighting
design is more sophisticated, focused not only on
simply providing quantity of footcandles for tasks
with accent illumination for highlighting, but also
on the art of using light to produce a desired effect.
To explain this last approach, which deals with how
the direction of light is controlled, let us start
with an object.
Key Light. When we shine a light
on an object from a single point source of light it
is called key light; it highlights contours on the
object and creates shadows; the exact effect depends
on the angle of the beam of light. Most of the time
we want to light the object to we can see its front.
In these cases, the light source may be best place
in front of and to the side of the object at an angle
of 45°.
Fill Light. While this scene effects
drama, for our purposes we will assume we need fill
light. It can either be directional or diffused. In
our example we could shine a directional light on
the object from the opposite direction of the key
light, softening or eliminating shadows depending
on the strength of the fill light relative to the
strength of the key light. We could also place fill
light sources behind the object to light the entire
room evenly. In the Figure below, we see the keylight
supplemented by a single fill light.
Silhouetting. Suppose we wanted
to emphasize the shape of the object as a silhouette.
In this event, we would soften or even eliminate the
key light and directional fill light, and instead
provide only fill light, either intense or diffused,
depending on the clarity of the silhouette and the
drama we want to produce.
Uplighting. Suppose we wanted to
uplight the object. The effect of uplighting is either
very desirable or very undesirable because it is unusual.
Effects range from intimate to eerie. A lot of landscape
lighting includes uplighting to accentuate bushes
and trees.
Sparkle And Glitter Effects. To
add an atmosphere of elegance, we could add little
lighting points of interest in the form of sparkle
or glitter. This effect can be produced by either
producing sharp reflections on specular surfaces in
the room (sparkle), such as silverware in a restaurant,
or by making the light source itself a source of interest
(glitter) such as with a chandelier. Beware of glare
in such cases.
Grazing And Washing Surfaces. On
walls or on the surface of an object, we can change
the way light impacts them so that we can produce
different effects. Suppose we have a brick wall with
a rough texture that we want to emphasize. We could
graze the surface with light, meaning the light would
strike the surface at a sharp angle. In this case,
the light source would be mounted close to the wall.
Now suppose the wall is smoother, and we want to emphasize
that smoothness. We could wash the surface with light,
meaning the light would strike the surface at a wider
angle.
The selection of strategy or combination of strategies
again will depend on how the space is used. In a retail
environment, it might be desirable to provide strong
keylighting to accentuate and dramatize key merchandise,
while in an office such strong concentrations of accentlighting
and shadowing might prove visually fatiguing. Uplighting
may work well in an intimate restaurant or to highlight
bottles of alcohol in a bar, but may make people look
sinister in the home or office. Sparkle and glitter
may work well in a restaurant, but might prove distracting
in many industrial work areas.
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