Cree LED Revolution Blog

Cree and LED lighting are starting a revolution

Bradenton Beach, Florida installs turtle-friendly LED street lights

Thursday, September 9th, 2010


I used to live on a barrier island off the coast of South Carolina. And each May, the locals worked hard to teach tourists the importance of leaving lights off during loggerhead sea turtle nesting season. The “Keep Lights Out for Loggerheads” campaign would get so embedded in my mind that, like a catchy song on the radio, I sometimes found myself mumbling “Lights Out for Loggerheads” under my breath.

What the islanders know that many tourists don’t realize is that artificial light can throw off loggerheads when they come ashore to deposit their eggs. Artificial light can also throw off loggerhead hatchlings because it can steer them away from the ocean.

So when I found out the City of Bradenton Beach, Florida was installing LED street lights approved by the Florida Wildlife Commission as turtle-friendly, my heart sang a little. Located on Anna Maria Island along the Gulf of Mexico, the City of Bradenton Beach recently replaced 100-Watt high pressure sodium street lights with decorative 17-Watt LED fixtures along Gulf Drive, the city’s main thoroughfare.

bradenton Beach

The city’s new LED street lights by Beacon Products use amber LEDs, which are visible to us humans, but are nearly undetectable to sea turtles and other marine wildlife, according to Beacon. Combine that with special optics and a full-cutoff luminaire, and you have turtle-friendly and dark sky-friendly lighting.

It’s still important for coastal residents and tourists to be mindful of their light usage during sea turtle nesting season. But we’re excited that LED lighting innovations are making it easier.

An LED flashblack: The 2009 NCAA men’s basketball championship celebration on Franklin Street

Monday, April 5th, 2010

This time last year, all eyes were on Chapel Hill, NC, after the Tar Heels secured the Men’s NCAA Basketball Championship. Fans filled Franklin Street, celebrating the win in true Tar Heel style, by taking the fun to the streets.

Many of us watched the revelry from the comfort of our couches. On TV, we saw thousands of students and fans dotting the main drag through Chapel Hill, cheering and jumping over fires. At Cree, we watched intently for other reasons.

About a week before the championship game, ten high-pressure sodium (HPS) streetlights on Franklin Street were replaced with LED streetlights. The orange glow cast by the HPS streetlights was cast aside and the white light produced by the new LED streetlights helped make colors pop.

The LED streetlights were installed in the 100 block of Franklin Street where students and residents gather to celebrate events like Halloween and big Tar Heel wins.

UNCHPS

Flickr user benuski posted this picture of Franklin Street during the 2009 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship celebration. Note the orange glow from the HPS streetlight.

Since the LED streetlights help make colors pop, it was easy to see which section of Franklin Street featured the energy-saving LED lights and which section was still stuck with the dimmer HPS streetlights. In the LED-lit section, you could actually see the Carolina blue T-shirts Tar Heel fans were rocking. In the HPS-lit section, it just looked like a dingy, orangey mob with some semblance of blue mixed in.

Take a look for yourself in this time-lapse video The Daily Tar Heel produced of the Franklin Street celebration last year. You’ll see the LED-lit side of the street on the left and the dingy HPS-lit side on the right:

Timelapse: Franklin Street after the victory from The Daily Tar Heel on Vimeo.

See, looks like the LED Lighting Revolution has game.

Boston tries LED streetlights, joins Cree LED City program

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

One of the oldest parks in the country is taking on some of the latest lighting technology. The City of Boston announced today that it is joining the Cree LED City ® program after recently installing LED streetlights along the “Mayor’s Walk” on Boston Common.

The demonstration project on Boston Common is the city’s way of trying out LED lighting as part of its overall efforts to “green” Boston.

The Common is one of the oldest parks in America, once serving as a British camp before the Revolutionary War. Back then, gas lighting had not even been invented. In fact, gas lighting didn’t spread to the United States until the early 1800s. It’s pretty cool to think that 200 years later, the park has turned into Boston’s testing ground for LED streetlights.

Boston Common in the fall. Photo by flickr user BostonPhotoSphere.

Boston Common in the fall. Photo by flickr user BostonPhotoSphere.

The LED City program is one way Cree helps cities give LED lighting a try, with the goal of speeding up adoption of this energy-efficient technology. Officials in cities that have never tried LED lighting often have a lot of questions about the technology.

At Cree, we help answer those questions and encourage cities to test LED lighting so they can see the results. It’s one thing to talk about how energy-efficient and beautiful LED lighting is. It’s another thing to actually see the savings and have the bright, even light shine on you.

Enter Boston. City officials decided to give LED lighting a try by installing LED streetlights made by six different manufacturers. Signs are posted along the path explaining how residents can submit comments about the lighting. Thumbs up that you can even tweet them your comments (@BostonLED).

LED streetlights consume 50 percent or less energy compared to traditional streetlights, and LED streetlights are designed to last up to five times longer. And since LED streetlights don’t have ‘bulb’s that require changing, the fixtures require little maintenance.

If you’d like your city to join the program, read up on these steps they need to take. Then contact your city council representative and start asking questions. It’s just another way you can join the LED Lighting Revolution.