Silver Spring, MD—The 38th annual High-Benefit Lighting Awards Program is now underway. Sponsored by the National Lighting Bureau, this unique program is open to owners, architects, engineers, lighting designers, landscape-lighting professionals, interior designers, facility and property managers, constructors, manufacturer’s representatives, utility employees, lighting-system users, and virtually anyone else associated with a new or upgraded illumination system that provides at least some of the many benefits of what the Bureau calls High-Benefit Lighting®.
The Bureau coined the term High-Benefit Lighting to connote “function-focused” electric-illumination systems that are designed to fulfill the specific purposes for which they will be used, especially to maximize bottom-line returns for those who own, manage, and/or rely on the lighting. For example, High-Benefit Lighting installed in workspaces can help people work faster, because the installation comprises electric illumination designed for the specific space, tasks, and people involved. Just a 1% productivity improvement can save an employer $300 annually for each worker paid $30,000 per year. The cost of the electricity that the employer buys to provide electric illumination to such an employee? Probably less than $50 each year.
Outdoors, High-Benefit Lighting can help prevent accidents of all types, from vehicle-vehicle to slip-and-trip, thus preventing the losses associated with accident clean-up, filing insurance claims, absenteeism, reliance on temporary help, administrative paperwork, negative publicity, and litigation. Fewer accidents can also result in lower insurance premiums. In retail situations, better lighting can help improve customer attraction and stimulate purchasing.
Lighting is also being used for health-care purposes, particularly in senior-care facilities where therapeutic lighting has been shown to offer important advantages.
According to National Lighting Bureau Executive Director John P. Bachner, the High-Benefit Lighting Awards Program is “easy to enter. We want to encourage anyone associated with a lighting-system upgrade or installation to submit an application that could lead to our development of a case history chronicling how High-Benefit Lighting contributed to the bottom line. While a system must be energy-efficient to be considered High-Benefit Lighting, the dollar value of productivity improvements, safety and security enhancements, increased retail sales, and other benefits of good lighting typically is far greater than the value of energy savings alone. The dollars saved even by operating and maintenance cost savings of 70% can be dwarfed by the value derived from a productivity increase of just one or two percent,” Mr. Bachner said.
For consideration in the 2017 High-Benefit Lighting Awards Program, an entry must be received by the National Lighting Bureau no later than December 31, 2017. An entry should document how modification of an existing lighting system or installation of a new one achieved some of the many bottom-line benefits of High-Benefit Lighting, such as improved productivity, increased retail sales, or fewer accidents.
All persons who enter the High-Benefit Lighting Awards Program receive a hand-inscribed certificate of participation. If Bureau staff develops an entry into a case history, the person submitting the information will serve as the bylined author of an article published in a prominent trade or professional journal.
The National Lighting Bureau is an independent, IRS-recognized not-for-profit, educational foundation that has served as a trusted lighting-information source since 1976. The Bureau provides its services to the public free of charge, thanks to the generous funding of the organization’s sponsors: professional societies, trade associations, labor unions, manufacturers, and agencies of the U.S. government, including:
-
OSRAM; and
Obtain more information about the Bureau by visiting its website (https://www.nlb.org/) or by contacting its staff at [email protected] or 304.870.4249.