(ARA) - What will the lighting in your home look like in the future? According to American Lighting Association expert Monty Gilbertson it will look a lot like it does today, only it will be more energy efficient. As a member of the Lighting Vision Committee for the non-profit Consortium for Energy Efficiency in Boston, Gilbertson is among those coming up with ways to get the general public to use 50 percent less lighting energy by 2012. The ideas they have come up with so far include educating the public about the benefits of using more energy-efficient compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs, moving to Energy Star-qualified fixtures and using dimmers with the new technologies. Norm Brown, regional manager of Norburn Lighting and Bath Center in Vancouver, B.C., says the latter is among the most promising recommendations he has heard. “Not only do you get great aesthetic results from putting lights on dimmers, the energy savings are astounding,” he says. “You use less wattage and double the life of the bulb to boot.” “In addition, dimmers allow for greater flexibility in lighting product selection and allow you to get multiple uses out of a room,” adds Gilbertson, who is a certified lighting consultant (CLC) and manager of Lighting Designs by Wettsteins in La Crosse, Wis. In today’s homes, the three main types of lighting available are incandescent, magnetic low voltage and electronic low voltage, which are all easily dimmed. There are several different types of dimmers. They include:
Jacklyn Stanton, owner of lighting supplier Lytestyles in Knoxville, Tenn., says “Technology is moving forward so quickly, I predict that within ten years, you won’t even be able to find today’s darling, the fluorescent bulb, on store shelves anymore, much less Thomas Edison’s incandescent light bulb. Everyone will be using LEDs (light-emitting diodes), which by the way are already dimmable.” Will that be the case? We’ll just have to wait and see. For more information about lighting design, or to find a lighting showroom near you, log on to the American Lighting Association’s Web site at www.americanlightingassoc.com or call 800-BRIGHT-IDEAS (800-274-4484). Courtesy of ARAcontent
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