At the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens, Greece, light pollution has been reduced by 70+% and energy requirements by half, according to representatives with Casambi, a wireless lighting control systems producer based in Finland. The company's products have application for small environments too, like the architectural lighting needs of churches.
Wireless lighting control is playing an increasingly bigger role in the architectural lighting of visually compelling community spaces—all the while promoting sustainability.
From the Panathenaic Stadium to the BBC, Casambi, a global provider of wireless lighting control technology, reports that its products have been specified in over 100,000 projects, with the company growing at a rate of 7,000 projects per month.
Casambi's technology, which is based on Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), provides lighting designers and manufacturers with a standardized framework to wirelessly link devices together, enabling the creation of personalized smart lighting networks.
Representatives for the company report that its project references span every application from small high-end residential to 10,000+ node industrial spaces.
Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) ... provides lighting designers and manufacturers with a standardized framework to wirelessly link devices together ...
Along with the Panathenaic Stadium, other installations include Harrods Dining Hall in London, Oxford University, and the relighting of the BBC.
Wireless lighting control solutions are gaining popularity owing to their proven track record of reducing energy consumption, lowering operating costs, improving safety, and providing transparent network infrastructure that can easily scale up with minimal disruption, Casambi representatives report.