(Editor’s
Note: The following appears courtesy of the LightingResearchCenter)
Retailers looking to add dazzle to their store window
displays may want to consider colored LEDs, or light-emitting
diodes. A field study from the Lighting Research Center
(LRC) discovered that colored lighting effects created
with these tiny lamps can cut lighting energy in retail
windows by 30 to 50 percent and attract more attention
from shoppers.
Retailers use lighting in display windows to illuminate
merchandise, attract attention, and even send a message
about the quality of their store. To get the most impact,
Dan Frering of the LRC says stores often use plenty of
high-wattage accent lights to highlight mannequins and
merchandise. “This creates visual interest and
makes the merchandise stand out from the background,” he
says.
This technique is effective but when used 12 or more
hours every day, the energy consumption and costs can
climb. The United States Department of Energy says lighting
is the biggest energy expense for retailers, accounting
for 37 percent of total energy use in U.S. retail buildings.
This energy problem could be eased with new types of
efficient lighting now taking off. The LED, a tiny semiconductor
that emits light in a range of vivid colors, is commonly
found in traffic signals, exit signs, and electronic
displays, but recent improvements have prompted lighting
specialists to look at new ways to use LEDs for illumination.
The potential benefits, including better efficiency and
longer life (up to 50,000 hours, or 40 times longer than
conventional incandescent lamps), have catalyzed global
research efforts in LED and solid-state lighting technology.
Colored LEDs, in particular, have become popular as an
architectural and display lighting option because they
offer flexibility to designers and consume half the energy
of traditional incandescent sources with color filters.
Experiments show potential
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP)
sponsored the LRC field study to determine whether energy-efficient,
colored window lighting could draw the interest of shoppers,
reduce energy consumption in store windows, and maintain
or improve retail sales. LRC researchers installed custom,
slim-profile LED fixtures in the windows of three stores
owned by a popular clothing retailer found in Los Angeles
area shopping malls. To cut energy consumption by 30
to 50 percent in each window, they eliminated all general
fluorescent lighting, reduced the number and wattage
of halogen accent lights, and added LED systems to create
colored backgrounds for interest. The researchers tested
different window display and lighting scenarios over
an eight-week period and surveyed shoppers about the
attractiveness, visibility, and eye-catching ability
of the windows. (Lighting inside the stores remained
unchanged.)
Frering says, “We designed the window lighting
to create impact and contrast with color, instead of
high light levels. This allowed us to reduce the amount
of accent lighting and cut energy use.”
After eight weeks and more than 700 surveys, the results
showed that the colored LED lighting was a hit with shoppers.
They preferred the colored LED window with a 30 percent
reduction in power over the typical high-energy lighting
design. The survey results also showed:
74 percent of shoppers found the new lighting design
to be eye-catching.
84 percent agreed that the LED display windows were
visually appealing.
91 percent confirmed that the reduced accent lighting
did not diminish the visibility of the window mannequins
and merchandise.
Cutting the lighting power consumption further to 50
percent in each window resulted in no significant difference
in shoppers’ opinions compared with the typical
lighting, and a lower opinion compared with the 30 percent
reduction.
Sales data gathered by the retailer showed no significant
change in sales at the three test stores during the study
period, even with a 50 percent reduction in power consumption.
Sales were compared with the same weeks for the previous
year and with comparable stores owned by the retailer.
Savings and payback offer incentive
The potential savings and payback that can come from
using alternative LED lighting designs may lead retailers
to consider these new concepts. The LRC estimates that
the average store can reduce power demand from lighting
store windows by up to 1 kilowatt, saving 5,500 kilowatt-hours
per year.* Given current LED lighting system costs and
estimated energy and maintenance savings, the typical
system payback is less than two years.
“Helping our commercial customers save energy
while increasing the effectiveness of their retail display
lighting is a good thing,” said Lillian Kawasaki,
assistant general manager of environmental affairs and
economic development for LADWP. “As more lighting
designers become familiar with the value of LED color
enhanced display lighting, we can expect to see significant
energy savings in Los Angeles and across the nation.”
However, a successful switch to LED lighting is not
as simple as replacing one type of lamp for another in
the same socket.
LRC Director of Research Nadarajah Narendran, Ph.D.,
says that many lighting applications can benefit from
LEDs if the implementation is appropriate and takes advantage
of the LED’s characteristics and performance. This
often means finding creative design solutions. “Instead
of trying to replace conventional technology with the
new in a given application, it is better to identify
alternate lighting solutions that exploit the strengths
of the new technology, even if it breaks tradition,” he
says. “That was one of our goals with this field
study.”
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