Cree LED Revolution Blog

Cree and LED lighting are starting a revolution

Energy Awareness Month 2011: ComEd Offers Illinois Customers Major Rebates on Cree LED Lighting

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Cree is celebrating Energy Awareness Month with a series of blog posts about ways Cree and our products are helping save energy.

When you hear the phrase “LED Lighting,” what comes to mind? If you’re like many, you probably think, “expensive.” And that’s okay – just know we’re doing everything we can to change that.

But some utility providers are offering rebates that make Cree LED lighting even easier on the pocketbook.

Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd), which serves more than 3.8 million customers across northern Illinois, or a whopping 70 percent of the state’s population, recently introduced major rebates on a host of Cree LED lighting products in an effort to help businesses and customers benefit from reduced energy costs.

Cree Energy Awareness Month

ComEd is offering rebates on Cree’s ENERGY STAR-qualified LR6 and CR6 six-inch LED downlights and the LBR-30 and LRP-38 directional spotlights. These rebates are part of the Smart Ideas for Your Business® Program, developed to help bring cost-effective energy-efficiency improvements to commercial and industrial customers. Each of these Cree LED lighting fixtures are designed to last 50,000 hours, and provide the high-quality light needed for conference rooms, office spaces and other common areas, while delivering higher efficacy than incandescent or compact fluorescent (CFL) lighting options.

Commercial and industrial customers can now receive a $15 rebate on Cree’s downlights and a $10 rebate on Cree LED spotlights! Considering the long-term, low-maintenance qualities of these LED lighting products, ComEd is offering its customers one heck of a deal!

Meanwhile, lighting-savvy homeowners can also save on high-quality LED lighting. If you truck on down to your local Home Depot store in ComEd territory, you’ll find the EcoSmart 6” LED downlight marked down to $29.97—thanks to ComEd’s incentive program.

So with more than just a golf clap, we applaud ComEd for its outstanding leadership in LED lighting rebates and hope it encourages more utilities to join the LED lighting revolution!

Want to find out more about utility rebates in your area? We have more information here.

Denny’s restaurants begin lighting up with Cree LED lights

Friday, January 14th, 2011

I feel like I can always count on Denny’s. If I’m hungry for breakfast after sleeping in on the weekend, Denny’s serves it all the time. If I’m craving a late-night meal after a night out on the town, Denny’s is still open. It’s such a recognizable restaurant chain, and that’s one of the reasons we’re fired up that the chain has adopted our LED lighting as its preferred lighting standard for all its new and remodeled stores across the United States.

 So when new Denny’s restaurants are built or older ones are up for remodeling, owners will turn to Cree LR6 LED downlights instead of incandescent, fluorescent or any other kind of LED lights.

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Cree LR6 LED downlights line the ceilings of this Colorado Denny's.

Our LR6 LED downlight is just that. It’s one of those lights you would screw into a recessed can lighting fixture. These fixtures are common in restaurants, retail shops and even newer homes. Start looking up when you’re out dining or shopping and you won’t believe how many dot the ceilings.

Denny’s corporate architect Mitch Riese says our fixture was chosen because of the quality of light it delivers (the last thing any restaurant needs is bad lighting), its long life (it’s designed to last 50,000 hours) and its energy savings (each light consumes only 10.5 Watts).

“We evaluated numerous LED light fixtures from a variety of manufacturers to ensure that we chose the best possible product and partner for this major lighting specification,” explained Riese, corporate architect and senior manager of design & construction for Denny’s. “With the Cree LR6 fixture, we found the best value for our money, helping us deliver beautiful, warm light, while significantly reducing our energy consumption and maintenance requirements.”

One of the believers is Denny’s franchise owner Pete LaBarre. When I first spoke with him a year ago, he had installed 340 Cree LR6 LED lights in four of the restaurants he owns in the Colorado Springs, Colorado area. When we checked back in with him recently he had installed more than 400 of the lights in the dining rooms of his five restaurants. He says his six-inch LED downlights are saving him around $15,500 per year in energy costs alone and that he has seen a payback of between 20 to 24 months, (depending on the electricity provider for each of his restaurants).

Cree LED lights line the ceiling in one of the Denny's restaurants Pete owns.

Cree LED lights line the ceiling in one of the Denny's restaurants Pete owns.

And he’s not stopping there, Pete has decided to replace 500 fluorescent bulbs and tubes with 200 Cree LR6 fixtures, illuminating the perimeter of each restaurant.

“Our lights stay on all the time, so we did a watt comparison of what we had in place before the LR6 downlights,” LaBarre said. “We found that we used 6,000 kilowatt hours less per month in the store that had the Cree fixtures versus the store that had the fluorescent lighting,” he said.

It’s cool to see quality LED lighting is making its way into more restaurants. It just goes to show that LED lighting is ready and that energy-wasting incandescent lights are best used in restaurants for one purpose – as heat lamps keeping your food warm.

Indiana Tech upgrades oldest building on campus with LED lighting

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

Built in 1857, the Administration Center at Indiana Tech University is a landmark for generations of alumni who know that even as the campus grows, they can always count on recognizing the familiar historic brick building when they visit.

And now, the oldest building on campus is historic for another reason: It’s the first building on campus to boast energy-efficient Cree LED lighting.

The 153-year-old building was gutted for renovation in October 2009 with the goal of achieving LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification. The resulting work transformed the pre-Civil War era building into a haven of energy-efficient technology and sustainable design.

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The historic Administration Center at Indiana Tech is a landmark for alumni.

When architect Terry Thornsbury of Viridian Architectural Design began planning the project, he said he knew he wanted to incorporate LED lighting.

“We wanted something that would help get us as many points as possible in the LEED system and reduce energy but also have a pretty good return on investment,” Thornsbury said. “Anyone who comes to me saying they want to save energy, the first thing I’m going to tell them is you’re going to want to do LED lighting because it makes sense these days to reduce energy consumption.”

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Ninety-eight percent of the building is lit with Cree LED lighting.

The three-story building is lit 98 percent with Cree LED lights, helping the Fort Wayne, Indiana-based college conserve energy, reduce maintenance and provide beautiful light for employees, students and alumni. The 10,957-square foot building features:

  • 97 Cree LR24™ LED troffer lights. Offices, conference rooms and corridors illuminated with beautiful, clean white LED light. Each light consumes only 44 Watts while delivering 3,200 lumens. The high-quality light features rates 90 on the Color Rendering Index with a color temperature of 3,500K.
  • 61 Cree LR6C™ LED downlights.  Each light consumes only 10.5 Watts while delivering 650 lumens. The lights rate 92 on the Color Rendering Index and also feature a color temperature of 3,500K.
  • Long lifetime. The Cree LED lights are designed to last 50,000 hours. At the 50,000 hour mark, Cree’s LED lights are designed to provide at least 70 percent of their initial light output. That means the lights in the Administration Center could last more than 19 years based on the university’s projected use of 10 hours a day, five days a week.
  • Energy Efficiency. Over the long life of the LED lights, compared to a fluorescent downlight, the energy-efficient lighting in the Administration Center can save an estimated 259,700 kWh, which avoids 270 tons of carbon dioxide emissions.
  • Intelligent Control. The Cree LED lights work with an Intelligent Lighting Controls system with occupancy sensors and daylight harvesting, a control system that helps conserve even more energy by automatically adjusting the light level based on how much natural daylight is shining through the building’s large, preserved windows.

The University also worked with Primary Engineering, Inc., a Ft. Wayne, Indiana-based firm dedicated to sustainable design and CM Buck and Associates, Inc. which distributes Cree LED lighting in the Ft. Wayne area.

Indiana Tech Facilities Director Mike Townsley said he was skeptical an all LED-lit building would provide enough light for employees to work under. But that hasn’t been a problem, he said. Instead, employees are taking advantage of dimmers installed in each room. He said most employees are keeping the lights in their offices dimmed to 50 percent, which helps save even more energy.

“We’ve heard positive feedback about the lights,” Townsley said. “So far I’m pleasantly surprised.”

Mike Peterson is one of the university officials who moved into the newly-renovated building in July. He said he likes the controllability the dimmer in his office offers. He also enjoys the quality of the LED light.

“There’s good light distribution around the room,” Peterson said. “It doesn’t feel like there are dark areas or shadows.”

As director of Alumni Relations, Peterson says there’s another benefit to the LED lighting: Alumni like it.

“When you’re talking with alumni, any time you’re doing anything that’s technologically advanced it’s a plus,” Peterson said, adding that it’s a bonus that LED lighting technology is helping the school conserve energy. “[Alumni] feel like we’re being smart with the money that’s invested by them,” he said.

The building houses the Alumni Welcome Center, which is designed to be an inviting place complete with a fireplace made with bricks salvaged from the building. The warm, recessed Cree LED lighting adds to the ambiance, he said.

Cree LR6C LED downlights and LR24 LED troffer lights illuminate the building.

Cree LR6C LED downlights and LR24 LED troffer lights illuminate the building.

The Administration Center renovations were made possible by a $2 million donation from alumnus Wilfred Uytengsu, Sr., who wanted the money to go toward energy-efficient improvements. The building was recently renamed the Wilfred Uytengsu, Sr. Center in his honor.

And while Thornsbury was initially hoping to achieve LEED Silver level certification, the project exceeded expectations and has been submitted for Gold level certification. We’ll let you know when Indiana Tech receives final word from the U.S. Green Building Council.

Idaho resident wins Cree LED lighting contest, will finally turn on his living room lights

Monday, August 30th, 2010


You know the lighting in your home isn’t working for you when you intentionally avoid turning the lights on. That’s what Jerry Saltzer has been doing in his home’s living room and office for some time. Instead, he relies on floor and table lamps to illuminate the areas. How come?

“The living room (and office) in our house is equipped with incandescent downlights in 16.5 foot ceilings,” Saltzer told me in an email. “The light they produce is fine, but replacing those light bulbs is such a big production that we are inclined to leave them off as much as possible and use floor and table lamps instead.”

Jerry is the winner of the Cree’s July LED lighting giveaway. He submitted this photo of his problematic lighting situation:

July Contest Winner

Jerry wins five Cree LR6™ LED Downlights, which he plans to install in his living room. The LR6 downlight consumes only 10.5 Watts and delivers the warm light of a 65 Watt incandescent light. And Jerry’s new LED lights are designed to last 50,000 hours, which means he won’t have to deal with the hassle of swapping out his living room lights for years to come.

“Installing LED lights with an expected lifetime of 50,000 hours means that we can turn them on every evening and yet probably won’t need to change them until 2050,” Jerry wrote.

There are only a two days left to enter the August Cree LED Lighting giveaway. Just upload a picture of bad lighting in your home or office to Cree LED Lighting Revolution and you could be featured here next month.

Country Living House of the Year lit with Cree LED lights

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

If you think a two-story house with shutters and a wrap-around-porch looks a little out-of-place nestled between the skyscrapers and marina in New York City’s World Financial Center, you’re not crazy. The Country Living 2010 House of the Year was airlifted in to show Manhattan what a high-end, well-built green home could look like.

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The Country Living House of the Year as it's being set up in Manhattan.

The historically-inspired green modular home is on display through Thursday, so you can see for yourself how a home can consume 50 percent less energy and save thousands of gallons of water a year compared to a standard code-built house, according to Country Living.

Among the ways this home is saving energy is through the use of energy-efficient Cree LED lighting. Cree provided our LR6™LED downlights for this year’s Country Living House of the Year to demonstrate the beautiful light quality and major energy savings that can be achieved through the use of LED lighting.

We constantly hear from skeptics that LED lighting isn’t ready to light your home. But that’s simply not the case, and we’re glad that the Country Living home in Manhattan (of all places) will be yet another public demonstration of LED lighting.

The LR6 downlights that are in the house consume only 10.5 Watts of energy and are designed to last 50,000 hours. That means the lights in this house could stay on for 8 hours a day and run more than 17 years. Could you imagine not changing a light bulb for 17 years? What’s more is at the 50,000 hour mark, these LED lights shouldn’t just burn out. Instead Cree’s LED lights are designed to provide at least 70 percent of their initial light output at the 50,000 hour mark. So, depending on your lighting needs, you could still be using them 50,000 hours later.

If you would like some LR6 LED recessed lights of your own, you can try to win our monthly photo contest. Each month we giveaway five Cree LR6 downlights to one lucky winner.  Just submit a photo of bad lighting in your home or office to qualify for the June contest.

April LED Lighting contest winner will light up his Hawaiian-themed coffee shop

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Charlie Trinh was surfing the Internet looking for “green products” when he found CreeLEDRevolution.com. The Houston, Texas resident says he saw our monthly photo contest and decided to give it a try.

“I needed brighter lights for my business,” Charlie said in an e-mail to me. He owns a coffee shop with a Hawaiian theme. “I want to convert over to LED lights but I would like to sample it out first before buying.”

Well, lucky for Charlie, he was the winner for our April LED lighting giveaway. He submitted this very dark photo of the counter at his coffee shop. This dark photo won Charlie five Cree LRP-38™ LED lights. His new 11 Watt LED lights are designed to last 50,000 hours, which means he could leave them on for eight hours a day, 365 days a year and they could last 17 years! And did I mention that would be an 85% percent energy savings if he replaced electricity-sucking incandescent?

April contest LED lighting winner

“That was my coffee shop with all the lights on, and it was still dark,” Charlie wrote.

We’re excited to bring LED lights into Charlie’s life and business. Prior to winning these lights he said his only experience with LED lights was with his LED flashlight. (You may recall that was also the case for Fargo, ND homeowner Dave Hultin).

Are you jealous of Charlie’s new energy-efficient Cree LED lights? Don’t be. Just enter our monthly photo contest for your chance to win five of your own. All you have to do is take a photo of bad lighting in your home, office, business, etc. and submit it here.

Seriously, I bet you can do that in five minutes. And spending five minutes to snap and upload a picture seems like a good use of time if it means you have a chance to win five Cree LED lights. Ready, Set, Go!

North Dakota homeowner is happy his Cree LED lights don’t have “Star Wars light saber effect”

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Dave Hultin recently wrote me through the contact form on the LED Revolution site saying he joined the revolution more than a year ago, when he outfitted his home with LED lights. I interviewed him last week to find out more. This is his story:

When Dave Hultin began designing his home in Fargo, North Dakota, he knew he wanted to incorporate energy efficient lighting. That’s when he started doing his homework. He knew CFLs were out of the question because he said his wife wasn’t keen on the potential health issues that could arise if any of the mercury-laden CFLs ever broke.

One night Dave was holding his son’s LED flashlight and he said he started to wonder if LEDs were being developed for residential lighting. He found a 40 Watt equivalent LED bulb online and ordered it.  He was disappointed when it arrived and it had a “laser beam feeling.”

“I wasn’t ready to give up,” he said. “I thought: ‘there’s got to be something better.’”

Dave said he started to read about the Cree LR6™ LED recessed light that, at the time, was only 12 Watts but delivered warm light. (A newer version is now only 10.5 Watts!). So he found a local supplier and bought four and had an electrician install them in his master bedroom, which was still under construction. He didn’t even have switches in place yet.

Dave was a skeptic and wanted to see if they would have the “Star Wars light saber effect” or if his family could actually live comfortably under the LED light. After the electrician installed his test lights, Dave visited the construction site to see how they looked.

“I remember that first night when I came there. I went there when it was dark. I was expecting the best, but hoping I wasn’t going to get a wimpy, little glow,” Dave said. “So I tentatively turned it on and I went ‘Yes!’ That’s when I was convinced it was a good thing.”

So Dave placed an order for more LR6 LED lights. In all, he placed 44 in his living room, kitchen, dining room, hallways, piano room and master bedroom. (Here are some pics Dave took and e-mailed me):

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DaveHultinHallwayupstairs

DaveHultinPianoRoom

“The biggest thing that I would say about the light quality is that I don’t have to talk about the light quality,” Dave told me. “It’s there and it’s what I would expect. I don’t have the Star Wars light saber effect going up to the ceiling. People don’t notice that something is different, they just see that it’s there and it works.”

Dave said he spent $3,867 on the LED lights. And by his calculations, the lights will pay for themselves in energy savings after three years (he has already lived in his home for a year). But since the LR6 LED lights are designed to last 50,000 hours, he’ll be racking up the savings long afterward.

“When I go to a relative or a friend’s house and notice they have a burned out bulb, I look at my watch and think: ‘In another 12 to 15 years, I’ll be doing that too,’” Dave said.

You can read more about Dave’s experience finding and trying out Cree lights on his blog.

Plein air painter wins March LED lighting contest, plans to put lights in his studio

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

On Earth Day we’re celebrating our efforts to spread energy-efficient LED lighting. Here’s the story behind the March Cree LED lighting contest winner. You can celebrate Earth Day by submitting a photo for a chance to win five Cree LED lights in our April giveaway.

To say that Gary Bradley’s passion depends on good lighting would be an understatement. Gary is a plein air painter, who spends much of his creative time on location, painting landscapes and buildings on 8×10 canvases. When he’s finished with his small paintings, he takes them back to his Raleigh, NC, studio and paints a larger picture.

Once he’s back indoors, the lighting struggle begins:

“As a painter, one of the things that you have difficulties with is getting lighting in an interior studio,” Gary said. “You end up with all these shadows and the lighting is uneven, especially with fluorescents. So you have to put cool light in and warm light in.”

But Gary is about to win his battle against uneven lighting. Gary is the winner of Cree’s March LED lighting contest. He won five Cree LR6 recessed LED lights, which he plans to install in the studio he is building in his new home. Here’s his winning photo entry:

March Winner

Gary’s new Cree LED downlights will cast a warm, even light in his new studio. And, when I called Gary to chat about his prize, he pointed out another perk to the lights he won – they don’t contain toxic mercury like the fluorescents he was using.

“In the art world, we work with a lot of materials that are toxins, so you try to find different ways to be friendly to the environment,” Gary said, adding that he likes that LED lights are mercury free.

It was good chatting with Gary and learning about his passion for painting. He left me with this thoughtful quote.

“We live in a world where a lot of things are broken,” Gary said. “The environment is broken, personal relationships are broken, so people need beauty to heal themselves. Art is one of the ways we express beauty.”

Want me to write about you next month? Enter the April LED lighting giveaway for your chance to win five Cree LED lights. To enter the contest, simply submit a photo of bad lighting in your home, office, studio, or wherever you spend your poorly lit days. Happy Earth Day!

California city once known as a getaway for Hollywood stars turns focus to sustainability

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Most people who visit Indian Wells, California, are probably drawn in by the four world class resorts, the spas and the lush golf courses. The resort community in the southern California desert became a retreat for celebrities after Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz opened the Indian Wells Hotel in 1958. Since then, city officials have worked to make Indian Wells a premiere destination in the Coachella Valley.

Indian Wells 009

These days, city officials are keen on sustainability, and energy-use reduction has become a key goal for the city. I had the “tough” job of visiting Indian Wells last month for an LED City® Council meeting, and while I was there I had the city’s management analyst Susan Weisbart give me a tour of some of the city’s LED lighting installations.

Indian Wells was the first California city to become an LED City. The LED City program helps municipalities speed up the adoption of energy-saving LED lights by connecting them with information they need to make informed decisions about installing LED lights.

One of the first LED lighting installations in Indian Wells involved swapping out incandescent lights that lit the outside of city hall and other municipal buildings with 12 Watt Cree LR6™ recessed lights. It’s a change that city officials say saves nearly $7,000 a year in energy costs. That’s not counting the maintenance savings of not having to replace burned out bulbs, since the LED lights they installed are designed to last 50,000 hours – or 17 years if they’re on 8 hours a day!

The city also has plans to replace the 50 Watt halogen lights illuminating the signature palm trees lining city streets with 11 Watt LED lights. Get this: The city estimates it can save $10,095 in energy costs per year once the project is complete!

Watch my LED tour and interview with Susan to see what Indian Wells is doing to save energy and money:

Orlando resort converts hundreds of fixtures to LED lights, projects to save $131,000 in first year

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

One of the biggest perks of LED lighting is how much energy it saves. We’re living in a world where it’s crucial to conserve resources. And a perk of saving energy is that it typically translates into fewer dollars on utility bills.

But it’s one thing to say you’ll conserve energy and reduce utility bills when you use LED lighting, and it’s another thing to actually experience the savings. So when I heard how much energy and money a large Orlando resort is saving by using LED lights, I had to share the details with you.

The Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress Resort is one of the largest resorts in Orlando, Florida, and it recently underwent a multi-million dollar renovation that included replacing traditional, antiquated lighting fixtures in its 54 hallways, as well as its freshly refurbished 10,000-square-foot lobby.

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The amount of energy and money the resort is saving with its new LED lights is remarkable.

According to Regency Lighting, replacing the resort’s hallway lighting with Cree LR6™ recessed downlights is projected to have a cumulative savings of approximately $131,659 in the first year, with a return on investment of about nine months. These savings include projected energy, labor and cooling expenses, as well as the cost of the new LED lights. By the fourth year of the LED lighting installation, this resort is expected to save more than half a million dollars!

LED lights make good sense for the resort’s lobbies and hallways because they’re lit 24-hours a day, seven days a week. The resort replaced halogen lighting fixtures located between each hotel room with 636 Cree LR6 LED lights. Those lights only consume 10.5 watts of power, an impressive 90-percent energy savings over the two 50-watt halogen bulbs they replaced! But they didn’t stop there.

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In the hotel’s lobby – which features live bamboo, animal statues and an indoor garden – halogen lights were replaced with Cree LRP-38™ LED bulbs, saving more than 80 percent on energy consumption alone.

So the next time you’re staying at a hotel look up at the lights in the lobby and hallways. If they’re not LED lights, tell the manager the hotel needs to join the LED lighting revolution. After all, one of the key parts of a revolution is rallying others to join the movement.