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Bank of China Head Office Beijing, China
This headquarters building contains a 30,000 square foot garden court with a banking hall and is one of the largest public atriums built recently. The serene drama of the garden is composed in part with flowerbeds, fifty-foot tall bamboo, a stone forest and reflecting pond. Carved travertine walls are defined by daylight and artfully arranged shadow.
Project Name: Bank of China Head Office Owner: Bank of China Architect: Pei Partnership Architects Lighting Design Firm: Kugler Tillotson Associates,Inc. Photographer: Higashide Kiyohiko & Shashinn Jimusho |
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Frist Center for the Visual Arts Nashville, Tennessee
This adaptive reuse project restores majesty and grandeur to a landmarked art-deco post office turned museum. Multi-layered exterior lighting achieves drama, depth and focus. Entry accents include backlit decorative grills; highlighted architectural elements surround doorways and rehabilitated lanterns incorporate low maintenance induction lamps.
Project Name: Frist Center for the Visual Arts Owner: Frist Center for the Visual Arts Architect: Tuck Hinton Architects Lighting Design Firm: Susan Brady Lighting Design, Inc. Photographer: Timothy Hursley |
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Gateway Village Technical Center Charlotte, North Carolina
This new state of the art technology center integrates a very large building complex into an urban residential community. The lighting responds to the architecture and setting and is designed for the pedestrian. Although monumental in scale, the lighting works with the architecture, creating exterior rooms for the occupants to enjoy and appreciate their surround.
Project Name: Gateway Village Technical Center Owners: Bank of America and Cousins Properties Incorporated Architects: Duda/Paine Architects, LLP, Little & Associates, and HKS, Inc. Lighting Design Firm: Cline Bettridge Bernstein Lighting Design, Inc Landscape Architect: ColeJenest & Stone Photographer: James West / West Production |
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50 Years of Television @ The Oca Sao Paolo, Brazil
This media and television exhibit in a historical Sao Paolo building, was designed in tandem with the exhibition designers. Culled from a range of lighting equipment in the architectural, theatrical, industrial and innovative milieu, the project created an inviting environment and communicated the exhibition messages and information to the viewer.
Project Name: 50 Years of Television Owner: GLOBO Exhibition Design: Ralph Appelbaum Associates Lighting Design Firm: Technical Artistry Photographer: James Cathcart |
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The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Washington D.C.
To commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the inauguration of the President honored by this Memorial, a new lighting design was commissioned. The FaÃf§ade, Grand Stairs and Text Frieze are illuminated for the first time as was the Coffered Dome. The completed design reduced energy consumption by 80% and incorporated a computerized control system that electronically alerts maintenance personnel of lamp failures.
Project Name: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Owner: The National Park Service Architect: John Russell Pope Lighting Design Firm: The Mintz Lighting Group, Inc. Photographer: Peter Aaron/Esto |
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JFK International Arrivals Terminal 4 Queens, New York
The architectural theme of transparency guided the lighting design concepts for this airport terminal. Inside, ambient uplighting and supplemental downlights for punch and animation are tools used throughout. This once cavernous, hectic and anonymous space has been transformed into more humane, separate and functional areas, each defined by the careful placement of the correct lighting instrument.
Project Name: JFK International Arrivals Terminal Owner: JFK International Airlines Terminal Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, LLP Lighting Design Firm: Susan Brady Lighting Design, Inc. and COMM Arts Photographer: Attila Uysa l |
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Luminous Arc San Diego Convention Center, California
Inspired by this city's role as coastal beacon and visitor magnet, Luminous Arc's gentle linear trajectory lures visitors up a Grand Staircase and toward a series of spectacular bay front vistas. The sculpture consists of a series of internally lit laminated glass lens assemblies mounted atop 21 stainless masts ranging in height from 14' to 39', spaced 20'apart.
Project Name: Luminous Arc Owner: San Diego Convention Center Corporation Architect: Tucker Sadler Associates Lighting Design Firm: James Carpenter Design Associates and Tanteri + Associates, Inc. Photographer: Brian E Gulick |
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Mickey and Friends Parking Structure Anaheim, California
The world's largest parking structure was built to replace surface parking used for the expansion of this theme park. Just seven different long life energy efficient fluorescent and metal halide lamps simplify maintenance. The project was brought in below budget by relying on simple fixtures tightly integrated with the architecture.
Project Name: Mickey and Friends Parking Structure Owner: Disney Enterprises, Inc. Architect: Wolf Architecture Lighting Design Firm: Fisher Marantz Stone, Inc. Photographer: Disney Enterprises, Inc. |
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Millennium Class Saint Nazaire, France
This project illuminated a 92,000-ton cruise ship with public spaces designed by 5 architects from 3 countries. The challenge was to provide a cohesive lighting design across a variety of public spaces under the extreme time constraints of a 27-month design/build period while adhering to marine regulations. The design includes approximately 16,000 lighting fixtures, 36 custom fixtures, 2000 meters of neon, 117 fiber optic illuminators and 36 LED projectors.
Project Name: Millennium Class Owner: Celebrity Cruises International Architect: Birch Coffee Design Associates and Wilson Butler Lodge Lighting Design Firm: Fisher Marantz Stone, Inc. Photographer: Phillip Ennis Photography |
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Mohegan Sun Phase II Uncasville Connecticut
The 7 acre second phase of this tribal casino and retail center was themed the "Casino of the Sky". It is the first casino to use natural light extensively; natural sky events are central to the design. It features an 85' onyx mountain under a 150' diameter planetarium dome, the largest ever. Clouds, sunsets, nebulae, auroras and jet planes are all represented in the show sequence.
Project Name: Mohegan Sun Phase II Owner: Trading Cove Associates Architect: Rockwell Group and Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates Lighting Design Firm: Fisher Marantz Stone, Inc. Photographer: Frederick Charles |
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Suba Restaurant New York, New York
This lighting scheme provides a dining experience unlike any other. Once a dilapidated building, this tri-level restaurant/bar is now a cool, edgy, sophisticated space. An open metal staircase perched above a shallow pool with waves of shimmering light, beckon patrons downward. Here the lower dining room incandesces with track-mounted fixtures and nighttime skylight illuminates with 4 colored steplights.
Project Name: Suba Restaurant/Bar Owner: Yann De Rochefort and Phillip Morgan Architect: Andre Kikowski Architect, PLLC Lighting Design Firm: Ann Kale Associates, Inc. Photographer: Peter Aaron/Esto |
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Thorne Hall Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine
This dining facility, the largest gathering space on campus, used for meals, dances, parties and special events, demanded a unique and engaging design. These chandeliers were thought of as birds in flight. They are mobiles with a tail to balance them. There are no lamps in the fixtures-all of the illumination is projected from 8 RGB LED projectors and 8 low voltage sources concealed in the troughs above.
Project Name: Thorne Hall, Bowdoin College Owner: Bowdoin College Architect: Kallman McKinnel & Wood Architects Lighting Design Firm: Kugler Tillotson Associates, Inc. Photographer: Jerry Kugler |
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Town New York, New York
This lighting design concept provides patrons with a series of striking vistas while maintaining an intimate dining experience. Achieving this required the integration of lighting into decorative architectural elements to create a stunning visual image from every table. The resulting sophisticated visual experience is unique for every diner.
Project Name: Town Owner: Town, LLC Architect: Rockwell Group Lighting Design Firm: Focus Lighting Photographer: David Joseph |