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8:30 AM
to
10:00 AM |
Nick Bleeker
Day-Brite ,Capri Omega
Manager, Business Development
“Sustainable Lighting Strategies that
Improve Building Efficiency”
Health Safety
and Welfare (HSW) Credit and Sustainable Design requirements will be
answered by:
How to
positively impact building efficiency and operating cost by leveraging
lighting techniques and technologies. Reviewing regulatory impacts of
the North American market. Overview the driving forces behind current
energy Initiatives: ASHRAE/IES Standard 90.01; Energy Policy Act of
2005; LEED Green Building Rating System ™ and examples of
optimized product / systems that achieve objectives while meeting
energy regulations.
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Mark Boshart
First Electric, Inc
"LED Lighting for General Illumination"
This course will look actual case studies as well as the technical data
about LED’s for designers to gain understanding of how to incorporate
LED’s into current designs to improve lighting conditions. The designer
will also learn how LED’s can contribute to LEED™ points when specifying
this system.
Objective will cover the
background and technology of LED’s; What to look for in an LED fixture,
LED’s and drives, thermal management and life, optical design, housings,
delivered lumens, environmental, cost, performance and examples.
|
|
10:30 AM
to
12:00 PM
|
Drew Thompson
Acuity Brands Lighting
Specifications Sales Manager South Central Region
“LED
Technologies”
At the
end of this session participants will be able to describe LED sources
and systems, answer most questions on LED sources, recognize key
features necessary for quality specifications, demonstrate the benefits
of LED sources when specifying. This session includes an overview
of history, technology covering the basic types of LED’s, lumens and
color. The thermal impacts and the economics as well as the value
proposition of thermal management, optical control and electronic
drives. |
Rob McCulley
Renaissance Lighting
“Total Cost of
Ownership Analysis—Evaluating Solid State Lighting”
This session
identifies the leading cost factors in lighting systems and the
financial qualifiers used to rationalize the investment, identify
conditions that require special consideration and identify where values
gained may offset return on investment shortfall.
|
|
1:00 PM
to
2:30 PM
|
Kim Torres
I.O Lighting Division Cooper Lighting
Specification Regional Sales Manager
“LED’s and the
Luminaries that House Them”
This
comprehensive program begins with the invention of the LED’s in 1963,
then clearly defines the evolution of this light source technology.
Moving far beyond applications such as electronic consumer devices,
automotive applications and traffic signaling, white LED’s now produce
more light output than incandescent light sources.
Consequently,
efficacy, unparalleled longevity and miniature nature of this light
source enables a new frontier in lighting design for fixture
manufactures and designers.
|
Terry Arbouw
Hubbell Building Automation
Director of Business Development
“Energy Saving
Lighting Controls”
Lighting that
is left on when it is not required, needlessly wastes en energy
regardless of how efficient it is. In order for a lighting system to be
truly efficient, it must not only use energy efficient lighting sources,
it must also ensure that lighting is used only when and where it is
needed We will explore the current state of the art in energy saving
lighting control strategies and the technologies used to deploy them. We
will also discuss the future of lighting control and the new and
emerging technologies that will allow even greater control and energy
savings such as building systems integration “Smart Buildings”,
Intelligent Luminaries, and Wireless. |
|
3:00 PM
to
4:30 PM
|
Mark Lien
LC, CLEP, CLMC,HBDP,LEEDAP
High–Performance Building Design Professional
Hubbell Lighting
"Illuminating the
Future of Lighting”
Lighting design was very different ten years
ago. What will it look like in 2018? Quantum dots, wireless electricity
and Solar Paint seem futuristic but are functioning in laboratories
already. Solid State Lighting is focused on LED’s today. In Addition to
addressing current LED performance we will plot the trajectory of
improvements in efficiency in color and thermal management. Organic
electronics, light emitting capacitors and advancements to more common
lighting technologies supply hope for reduced energy consumption, less
maintenance and environmentally sound solutions.
|
COST
The registration fee for IES MEMBERS
attending Each 90 min. course is $30.00, or attend any four (4) 90 min
courses for $95.00.
The fee for NON MEMBERS is $40.00 per 90 min. course or any four(4) 90
min. courses for $125.00
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Click Her for the Full
Day's Schedule
For more details about this program, contact Kent Beardsley by
E-Mail
or call
(713) 869-9559 |
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