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Lighting Crossroads:
Research Centers
Other categories of Lighting Crossroads are:
- Building Research Establishment(UK)
- BRE's main role is to advise and carry out research for Government,
principally the Department of the Environment (DOE), on technical aspects
of buildings and other forms of construction, all aspects of fire, and
environmental issues related to buildings. It also manages information
transfer for DOE's Energy Efficiency Best Practice programme. BRE provides
the technical basis for the Building Regulations and many British codes
and standards, and communicates its findings widely to the industry
and building owners through BRE publications and seminars. BRE also
contributes to the development of European codes and standards, and
supports Government departments and UK industry in the implementation
of the Single European Market.
- Electric Power Research
Institute, (EPRI) Customer Systems Group(USA)
- EPRI does not currently have a single part of its web site devoted
to lighting. Select the "Find" option and do a search on lighting to
generate a list of links to EPRI pages dealing with the topic. Brief
information on EPRI's
Lighting Information office is provided. Parts of EPRI's web site
are accessable only to members.
- Industrial Assessment Data
Base(USA)
- Formerly known as the Energy Analysis and Diagnostic Program (EADC),
the Industrial Assessment Center Program, funded by the Department of
Energy's Office of Industrial Technology (OIT), consists of 30 university
based Centers in the United States, each conducting 30 on-site assessments
annually at small to medium sized manufacturers. The database, which
is updated daily, includes lighting-related projects. The Industrial
Assessment Data Base housed at Rutgers University contains data pertaining
to 5,000 industrial assessments with 60,000 recommendations made since
1977.
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The Institute for Research
in Construction (IRC) of the National Research Council Canada (NRC)
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- Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, Center for Building Science (USA)
- Lighting
capabilities
- LBNL is well-known for its early groundbreaking work in helping
to commercialize the electronic ballast. The Lab has gone on
to other R&D enterprises, as well as a whole host of cross-cutting
lighting projects that span the areas of technology (light sources,
power supplies, controls, optics, daylighting), human factors,
design tools, design assistance & demonstration projects, collaboration
with industry, energy & economic analysis, utility issues &
demand-side management, international topics, codes & standards
development, and development of various information products.
This link provides a listing of major areas of expertise at
LBNL, illustrated with specific projects.
- Sky
Simulator: Computer-instrumented artificial sky for
conducting detailed daylighting studies using scale models.
- Energy-Efficient
Fixtures Laboratory
- Integrating Sphere: Measurement of total light output
from any lamp type.
- Dirt Depreciation Chamber for CFL Fixtures: Measurement
of reduced light output as luminaires gather dirt from the surrounding
environment.
- Lamp Construction Laboratory: Glass-blowing facility
for developing new lamp designs.
- Goniophotometer: Automated facility for performing
photometric analyses of luminaires.
- Luminaire Thermal Performance: Equipment and data collection
facilities for quantifying the loss of light output from fluorescent
sources operating under non-optimal thermal conditions.
- Lighting Research Center, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute (USA)
- Flip a switch...pull back a curtain...the light that fills our homes
and offices is something we seldom think about. But how does light affect
us? Is it safe? Efficient? Does it help us feel happy, productive, and
creative? How can we introduce the lighting we need without endangering
our environment? The Lighting Research Center (LRC) in the School of
Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute was formed in 1988
to answer these questions.
- National Research Council Canada
- Lighting Quality Project(Canada)
- The purpose of the project is to examine the relationships between
interior lighting systems for offices, lighting energy consumption,
and behavioural outcomes such as cognitive task performance, clerical
work, mood, visual performance, comfort, and satisfaction.
- The Building Design Assistance
Center at FSEC(USA)
- The Building Design Assistance Center (BDAC) at the Florida Solar
Energy Center (FSEC) promotes energy-efficient building design in Florida.
BDAC provides the architectural and engineering community with free
design assistance through plan reviews, building energy simulations,
development of construction details, and assists with selection of appropriate
materials and equipment. BDAC also conducts extensive laboratory and
field tests to measure the effectiveness of new and existing products
designed to improve energy efficiency. Recent lighting-related projects
have examined daylighting, occupancy sensors, and torchiere fixtures.
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