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Light Bureau complete relighting of Christopher Wren's Monument

Architectural lighting design consultants Light Bureau have recently completed refurbishment of Sir Christopher Wren's flame-topped Monument to the Great Fire of London.

    LONDON, UK April 16, 2010 /Engineering PR News/ -- Architectural lighting design consultants Light Bureau have recently completed refurbishment of Sir Christopher Wren's flame-topped Monument to the Great Fire of London.

Built in 1677 The Monument is the tallest isolated stone column in the world, standing 202 ft high and positioned 202ft from the spot in Pudding Lane on which the Great Fire is believed to have started. Every year, over 100,000 visitors climb the 311 spiral steps to the Monument's observation gallery to enjoy unique and exhilarating views across the Capital.

Working closely with conservation specialists, Julian Harrap Architects, Light Bureau were responsible for the internal lighting design upgrade.

The lighting design to what is arguably one of the nation's most important cultural and heritage icons represented a unique challenge, the question was how should one light a structure which pre-dates electric lighting by more than two centuries? The old scheme was typically unsympathetic, utilizing as it did large and unsightly bulkhead fittings. Light Bureau set out to create a new solution with minimum visual intrusion; special linear LED sources were designed to the same profile and dimension as the iron stair balustrade spindles. Finished in the same colour and fixed by metal straps, the new lighting is barely noticeable to visitors.

The interior of the stair is re-finished as it was originally in a limed wash, giving excellent reflectance and making best use of the indirect lighting solution which Light Bureau designed for the space. For interest, light has been designed to the interior of the flaming urn at the top of the column and to the crypt below the stair - areas which are not publicly accessible can now be seen by visitors.

Little information or guidance is available for heritage projects of this kind and the designers elected to keep illumination levels to a bare minimum - approximately 50 lux average. Light Bureau solved the emergency lighting problem as discretely by advocating a central battery system which feeds 25% of the standard LED balustrade sources.

The new lighting carries with it the advantages of very low energy use (approximately 1.3kW total - about half the energy used to boil a kettle), longevity and minimum maintenance. Of the installation, Light Bureau's Paul Traynor states "the architect involved us knowing that, specialist lighting advice was key to a successful renovation project. The design has been well received, presenting as it does an ultra discrete, sympathetic and sustainable light to the interior of the tower".

The project has been shortlisted for both the English Heritage 'Building in a Historic Context Award' and the 'RIBA London Building of the Year Awards'

Light Bureau is an independent lighting design consultancy based in London. Established in 1999, the practice has become one of Europe's leading creative lighting consultancies.

Client: City Of London
Architect: Julian Harrap Architects
Lighting Design: Light Bureau (Paul Traynor, Paul Nulty, Tim Burrell-Saward)
Lighting Supply: Mike Stoane Lighting, Encapsulite UK, AC/DC
Main Contractor: CWO
Date Complete: February 2009

Light Bureau is an independent lighting design consultancy based in London. Established in 1999, the practice has become one of Europe's leading creative lighting consultancies.


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Paul Nulty
Light Bureau
Design Director
studio 7f hewlett house, havelock terrace
London, ny
UK sw8 4AS
Voice: 02074986111
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