Commercial Indoor Lighting
by admin
Almost every client you consult for is going to be concerned about the recession and is going to want reassurance that the lights they buy today will last a long time to come and will help them either save money, make money, or both. If you can prepare a proposal in advance that quantifies specific channels of ROI, you can give yourself a competitive advantage over almost any rival you are up against. Many commercial environments in and of themselves are defined by the type and quality of indoor lighting. Some depend on the lighting itself as a contributing factor that directly impacts the generation of capital. Others experience the benefits of indoor commercial lights on a more indirect, somewhat intangible level. The quality and nature of an organization’s commercial indoor lighting system has a direct impact on its morale, production time, and generative financial power. Understanding the type of business you are looking to help will in turn help you very quickly what types of commercial indoor lights to order to best meet the requirements of your client’s environment, activities, and fiscal capabilities.
Industrial Organizations
Factories, warehousing operations, and shipping organizations receive the greatest benefits from indoor commercial lights that cut power costs and provide superior supportive task lighting. They seldom take the time to focus on decorative concerns, choosing instead to give top priority to the utilitarian and functional requirements of lighting that helps employees get their jobs done. This is both a matter of focus and a matter of safety in industrial environments. Shadows constitute trip hazards in warehouses and factories, and glare can create an equally hazardous environment. For shipping/receiving, manufacturing, and material handling facilities, it is imperative to think SAFETY and CONSERVATION with every fixture you install. Keep in mind that industry is very heavily related in these areas, just as commercial indoor and outdoor lighting are becoming increasingly regulated. Helping your client meet with all OSHA and ANSI codes and demonstrable prove their facility has not only new light, but also a new safety rating, can potentially lower their commercial insurance cost and take them someday down the path of LEED Certification.
Service Based Organizations
Office personnel in service industries work best in an environment under commercial indoor light that is both task and decoratively oriented. Usually this involves multiple layers of both direct and indirect light, and it almost always requires more than one lamping option. Commercial lighting controls help to control both indoor lighting levels and the consumption of electricity. It also helps certain specialty rooms, such as conference rooms, function in a multi-dimensional capacity. The ability to both control the overall level of light and directly manipulate layers and colors of light is vital to effective presentation and maximizing the potential of any environment used for presentations, audio-visuals, and teleconferencing.
Retailers
Retailers must have commercial indoor lights that produce the very best CRI that will fully magnify the colors of products on shelves and to showcase anything of importance that has been placed in its own display. They also need multiple layers of light, normally at least two to effectively showcase both their floor space and specific products that are intended to be differentiated from general product selection. It is paramount to do this as cost effectively as possible. Retail profit margins are normally rather slim, so the more you trim a store’s overhead on power bills, the more readily they will embrace both the technology and the design you propose.
Hospitality Clients
Hotels, country clubs, restaurants, and resorts require a very specialized approach to commercial indoor lighting. Almost every location contains a variety of buildings whose interior architecture varies on a room per room basis. So many special events occur within each room of every facility that commercial indoor lights must provide everything from task and general lighting to special decorative and associative aesthetic themes that support the brand of the organization, the activities that normally occur with each area, and a general sense of removal from mundane reality to a higher, superior, and more eclectic realm of activity.
Clients Interested in LEED Certification
Any client in any of the four industry classifications above could possibly be looking to obtain leed certification. Commercial indoor lighting will be a major factor in earning points toward such an accreditation. Because high electric bills are very often the result of high temperature created by outdated lighting fixtures, very often the first step in lowering the power costs for these clients is to replace indoor lights that are burning too hot with cooler burning equivalents. Hand in glove with this methodology is also replacing lights with lower LPW with superior LPW efficiency ratings. New commercial fluorescent lighting, induction lighting, and most especially, LED industrial lighting all offer new options never before available to lower overall electric consumption and qualify for points in environmental friendliness and innovation and design as well.
Lighting Design Services from RLLD Commercial Lighting
Our clients are contractors, architects, and commercial lighting design firms who range in size from the sole proprietor to the multi-site corporate level. To accommodate this broad spectrum of clientele, and to ensure that everyone has the ability to save time on proposal development and develop superior, energy efficient solutions in full compliance with all governing regulations, we have investing in state of the art point by point lighting design software which we will use to help you develop your client’s system at no additional charge provided you purchase your commercial indoor lighting fixtures from us. Small companies can appear equal to large ones through this partnership, and large companies can save money on training and staff development by outsourcing schematic design to our experts.
R. Neal
http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/commercial-indoor-lighting-707175.html
Do we really need to put on sunscreen for sun protection?
Think about it. Our ancestors did not have indoor lighting; they
exposed their skin to the sun regularly. They didn’t run and hide
from the sun, they used it as nourishment to generate a crucial
vitamin that supports human health in a multitude of ways. The idea
that "the sun is bad for you" makes about as much sense as "water
is bad for you" or "the Earth is flat." This persistent myth was
invented, marketed and publicized by an industry that profits from
a gullible public believing demonstrable falsehoods.
But why would the cancer industry go along with the deception, you
might ask? Because the continued commercial success of the cancer
industry depends on more people getting cancer.
The cancer industry has no
interest whatsoever in preventing cancer. The industry, in fact,
takes steps to interfere with prevention efforts and thereby ensure
the growth in the number of future cancer patients…
The benefits of sunscreen are a myth. Proponents say sunscreen
prevents sunburn, but in fact, the real cause of sunburn is not
merely UV exposure: It is a lack of antioxidant nutrition. Start
eating lots of berries and microalgae (spirulina, astaxanthin,
blue-green algae, etc.), and you’ll build up an internal sunscreen
that will protect your skin from sunburn from the inside out.
Sunburn is actually caused by nutritional deficiencies that leave
the skin vulnerable to DNA mutations from radiation, but if you
boost your nutrition and protect your nervous system with
plant-based nutrients, you’ll be naturally resistant to sunburn.
The same nutrients, by the way, also protect the optic nerve and
eyes from radiation damage. That’s why the consumption of berries
and carrots, for example, has historically been associated with
healthy eye function. (The same nutrients that protect the eyes
also protect the skin.)
You do realize our ancestors died much sooner (earlier age) than us and that there was a time where cancer couldn’t be diagnosed, so who knew why they were dying. The sun isn’t an evil entity, but there are steps now that can be taken to make sure your skin stays healthy. It doesn’t mean that every person who tans will get cancer or everyone who takes precations won’t though
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I dont like direct sun into my skin, simply because I dont like getting burnt.
I rubbed my husband’s body w suntan lotion although he didn’t really like it, because if not, I could peel his skin(which he enjoyed so much) but i hate to see his rough skin .
I just simply like to have a smooth skin. I wear hat or umbrella if it is too sunny.
My skin is very smooth, I am 60 w/o any line of wrinkle yet anywhere, it looks healthy too.
Sure when Iam dead my body will be rotten but now when Iam still alive, I might as well look and feel nice.
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YES!
UVA and UVB rays can penetrate the clouds even on the most overcast of days. It is especially important to use sunblock when you wear few articles of clothing, and with the decaying ozone layer… I wouldn’t chance it. SPF 15 or 30 are what you should wear.
Sunglasses are also very important because your eyes are just as sensitive as your skin. Polarized sunglasses offer even more protection.
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Our ancestors did spend much more time outdoors without sunscreen.
BUT…….
What is your ancestry? Do you live closer to the equator than your ancestors? The suns rays are stronger there (which is why people native to these areas generally have more melonin in their skin.
Also, the ozone layer is being depleted, and so more damaging rays are being let through.
Also, cancers from sun damage take many years to form, frequently not showing up until people are in their 50’s or older, and our ancestors were often lucky to make it to 40!
5 minutes of sunshine daily is enough to provide your requirement of Vitamin D, and this is produced even when you are wearing sunscreen!
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I didn’t use sunscreen and developed melanoma cancer. So your theory is just a POS, like you.
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