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Home » Categories » Real Estate » Construction » Home Lighting Design For Aging Eyes. Part 1: the Basics » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Home Lighting Design For Aging Eyes. Part 1: the Basics

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Submitted Friday, January 12, 2007
Ralph Pressel (47,999)
Before The Architect
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INTRODUCTION

This is about a home lighting design guidance system to light home interiors for aging eyes, the aim of which is to tailor home lighting design practically, not only sensitive to its occupants, but also easily specified and readily recognized in retail settings and by lighting professionals.

Before The Architect takes increasing interest in home lighting design.

  • Most clients of Before The Architect are mature [that’s PC for older], and mature eyes, as compared to eyes in youth and early-middle years, need more light and need light presented more selectively
  • There is little guidance that bridges research and hands-on application
  • Home lighting "design" often arises from: arbitrary allowance; (sub)minimum standards; personal want, not informed need; limited forethought; installer-styled installation; getting the certificate of occupancy; thoughtless grasping 

Rules for Home Lighting Design for Aging Eyes

  • Layer lighting
    • two-plus layers ambient, evenly distributed
    • to two layers task, evenly distributed, preferably one, and, in potentially hazardous spaces such as stairs, workshop, etc., only one layer, excluding accent lighting
  • Apply dimmer switches wherever possible (Lutron makes applying dimmer switches a whole lot easier than it used to be, including 4-way dimming involving every device in the gang)
  • Apply incandescent illumination as a last resort
  • Define illuminance on three levels (approximately, not obsessively, allowing to the high side) – 40, 70, 100 foot candles, or lumens/foot2 [or fc, lm/ft2, equal and used synonymously]

Sidebar:  Aspects of home lighting design metrics settled without wiggle-room, to communicate with house lighting pros:

  • Again, 1 fc = 1 lm/ft2, where foot candle = fc or ftc and lumen = l or lm
    • which metrics measure illuminance, or the perceived intensity of light or light level
    • all light bulbs or lamps – incandescent or fluorescent – have illuminance ratings in lumens/Watt (LPW or lm/W or lpW), a measure of illuminance efficiency related to the Watts you pay for in bulb and electricity
    • author derates published lpW by a 0.8 multiplier, or 20% discount, for merchandising hype, resistance wear, dirt accumulation

  • Arrange illuminance so that –
    • in-between abutting spaces, the fc change
      • shall be no greater than 30 fc
      • may grade in levels less than 30 fc in the interims

Comment: Passage from one light level to another with these rules should naturally offer in almost all cases illuminance level change as a transition and not as a suddenly parted curtain

    • bare bulbs shall not be casually observable (saying brightness and glare are not the same)
    • for specific areas
      • hallways, small closets, and most common and private spaces get 40 fc, ambient or task, depending on viewing intensity – e.g., hall, common and private spaces are usually ambient, closets are usually task
      • moving-around areas of bathrooms, kitchens and other utility spaces, walk-in closets, most stairways get 70 fc, not more than 40 fc of which is ambient and not less than 40 fc of which is task
      • active viewing areas at bathroom and kitchen counters, laundry, workshop, etc. get 100 fc, not more than 40 fc of which is ambient
    • given 2 special considerations

Special Home Lighting Design Consideration 1:

      • measuring 100 fc work areas, as in a kitchen, island, pantry, bathroom, laundry, sewing, game, workshop and the like, includes not less than the work surface area plus 1 linear foot back from it
      • strictly utility areas, e.g., laundry, pantry, etc., and, particularly, utility areas with hazard potential, e.g., workshop, such an area’s illumination shall be on a single branch and without a dimmer switch

Special Home Lighting Design Consideration 2:

      • a task area shall be illuminated on a standalone basis at not less than 40 fc of task lighting at the task area (the practical implication of which is that maximum illumination in some task areas is not less than 40 fc + 70 fc = 110 fc)
      • allowance shall not be reckoned for cabinets and the like that cover relatively high-illuminance surface area, i.e., surface area counts and gets illuminated no matter what
    • in functionality
      • ambient for most spaces
      • task for work areas
      • leave most or all dramatic lighting to clients and lighting pros
    • in specific formulations of lighting quality
      • ambient means accepting as minimums
        • Color Rendering Index (CRI) over 80, preferably over 90 [available: compact at 80-95, and tube fluorescent at 65-95, and incandescent at 85-99+]
        • Correlated Color Temperature (CCT) not greater than 3000K (a/k/a Kelvin) [available: compact at 2700-4100 and tube fluorescent at 2700-6500, and tougher for incandescent at 2700-2800]
      • task means accepting as maximums
        • CRI to 90, preferably not more than 80 [compact and tube fluorescent, tougher for incandescent]
        • CCT not less than 3000K [compact and tube fluorescent, but not incandescent as so far researched]

Before The Architect designs and drafts custom home plans nationwide.  Its principals Ralph and Jean Pressel have worked hands-on together since the ‘60s in custom home design, drafting, consulting, plus building and repair in every major trade.  Their plan sets are extraordinarily detailed; their clients' active involvement throughout is essential. 

Home Design Standards - Home Building Standards 4Q08 Edition e-book at 823 pages and the website www.beforethearchitect.com at nearly 1000 pages of text and illustrations are enterprises of Before The Architect’s principals.




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