| August 30, 2010 |
Come see us in Miami, Ann Arbor or Shanghai
By Deb Lovig |
We’ve got three more LED City Council Meetings on the calendar, including the first in China. Come join us in Miami, Ann Arbor or Shanghai. We’ve got a great group of speakers lined up for Oct. 1 at the Miami Art Museum.
You’ll hear from the Cities of Raleigh and Ann Arbor, as well as Miami/Dade County. They share their experiences with LED lighting and their plans for deploying this energy efficient new lighting technology. You’ll also hear about some LED lighting incentive programs ONCOR is offering its customers in the Dallas area.
Miami/Dade County is also sponsoring an energy-efficient lighting expo in the Miami Library building a few steps from the Art Museum so attendees can talk directly to LED lighting vendors throughout the day.
| July 8, 2010 |
Has your city tried any creative financing deals for LED Lighting? Let us know
By Deb Lovig |
We’ve been upfront over the last few years that the purchase cost of LED lights is generally higher, sometimes a lot higher than traditional lights. This stumbling block slows the adoption of LED lighting and prevents cities from starting to reap the energy and maintenance costs they can realize with quality LED lights. While we can show significant energy savings and maintenance cost avoidance, cities are still struggling to find ways to fund their desired deployment of LED lights.
I am now hearing from quite a number of firms and funds that have recently been formed to address this issue. There are for-profit and nonprofit firms and groups contacting cities and the LED City program to offer performance contracting and/or a wide range of financing options to help cities get the upfront funds they need to begin serious deployment of LED lighting in applications and installations that can offer attractive financial savings over the life of the fixtures.
This is so new that we are all looking for proof points – financing deals that work. I’d like to know if your city is working with a third party to finance LED lighting and I’d like to share information about how the deal is structured is this blog so we can all start learning about what works for financing options and what doesn’t.
Let me know what’s working for your city – post it here!
| June 22, 2010 |
Durham, NC joins LED City program by installing LED lights in city’s oldest parking garage
By Ginny Skalski |
In 1964, the city of Durham, NC, began construction on its first parking garage. The Corcoran Parking Garage is still heavily used more than 45 years later, providing daytime parking for downtown workers and evening parking for theater-goers at the Durham Performing Arts Center and even baseball fans at the nearby Durham Bulls Athletic Park.
Renovations on the aging garage began last year, and are being wrapped up this month. Among the new features are 200 LED lighting fixtures, which dramatically improve visibility in the newly-painted garage.
City officials say the new LED fixtures use only one-fifth of the energy consumed by the metal halide fixtures they replaced. At the 0:52 mark in this video, you’ll really notice the dramatic difference in lighting if you look at the contrast of the orange high pressure sodium streetlight glowing in front of the garage.
As part of other renovations, the City of Durham is currently installing LED lighting in another downtown parking deck and has plans for yet another. The Bull City, as it’s affectionately called by locals, joined the LED City program last month, and plans to continue considering energy-efficient LED lighting as it renovates and constructs new buildings and structures.
For a look at some original photos of the Corcoran Parking Garage as it was being built in 1964, check out this blog post on Endangered Durham.
| June 2, 2010 |
Cree to provide LED lighting for kitchens in new Habitat for Humanity homes
By Ginny Skalski |
Cree LED lights will soon light up kitchens in thousands of homes built by Habitat for Humanity. Last month,Cree announced its three-year, $1.5 million pledge to Habitat for Humanity International to provide our newest LED downlight for the kitchens in all new Habitat homes built in the United States.
Specifically we’ll be providing our CR6™ downlight, which is targeted to go to market this summer for about $60 each. This 10.5 Watt downlight is designed to last 50,000 hours, which means if homeowners use these lights four hours a day, they shouldn’t have to replace them for more than 30 years.
We’re very excited about this pledge because it can help reduce electricity costs for low-income homeowners. Habitat for Humanity already works to build homes that are more sustainable and efficient, and the addition of LED lights will help these homes save more energy.
In North Carolina, a Habitat homeowner should save almost $450 over five years by having the CR6 down lights installed instead of the currently-used halogens.* For a house in California, that jumps to nearly $600 in savings.*
A couple of weeks ago, I got to visit a Habitat home being built in Durham, NC. We delivered two of the CR6 downlights. My boss climbed up on a ladder to show the crew how to install the lights. All he did was take the trim off the existing fixture, unscrew the energy-wasting Halogen light and screwed in the CR6. Since I filmed him doing it, I was able to time him, and it took him 28 seconds! But you’ll have to take my word for it, because I’m not sure he’s ready to make his YouTube debut quite yet.
However, I also filmed the installation of the next CR6 by David Larkins, the construction director for Habitat for Humanity of Durham. I pulled him aside afterward to talk to him about the LED lights that were just installed. At the time he had no idea Cree was planning on putting these lights in kitchens at thousands of Habitat homes. Here’s what David had to say:
“We try to make a house that’s really easy to maintain, and energy efficiency is part of that,” he said. “A lot of the energy-efficiency improvements that we do just make a home that is smarter and simpler to maintain.”
Cree designed the CR6 specifically to make LED lighting more affordable for residential applications and we couldn’t think of a better residential application than inside homes for Habitat for Humanity.
*We came to this conclusion by using a North Carolina electricity rate of 9.42 cents per kWh and a California rate of 15.69 cents per kWh. We calculated four lights turned on 6 hours a day.
| May 20, 2010 |
Durham Deploys LED Garage Lighting
By Deb Lovig |
The City of Durham (NC) joined the LED City® program today, announcing deployment of more than 500 LED garage lights as a strategic step toward carbon emissions reduction.

Check out the beautiful LED lighting inside Durham's Corcoran Parking Deck.
I’ve been working with Tobin Freid for the past couple years. She’s the Durham City and County sustainability manager and she’s enthusiastic about LED lighting.
Tobin believes, along with many other city officials I’ve talked with in North Carolina, that LED lighting, especially for large area outdoor applications, will be key to helping cities meet their aggressive carbon emission reduction goals.
Durham County officials are in lock-step with Durham City officials on deploying LED lighting and we welcome both the city and county as the newest participants in the LED City program.
And, the Raleigh LED City Council Meeting has been set for June 3 at the Raleigh Convention Center. City, county, university and state officials from North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia are welcome to attend this day-long informational forum to hear from Raleigh, Ann Arbor and Danville, VA, officials who have worked for years (it won’t take that long now!) to deploy LED lighting in their cities for energy and maintenance cost savings as well as to help meet their carbon emission reductions goals. Join us if you can. You can RSVP here.
| May 4, 2010 |
LED lighting (almost) anywhere you look
By Deb Lovig |
When you’re overly interested in LED lighting, you seem to find it everywhere. Okay, that’s an exaggeration but not a huge stretch.
Fourteen Cree LED zealots, in Frankfurt for the L+B show in April, got an extended stay due to the volcanic ash cloud that grounded flights to and from a large portion of Europe.
Faced with a fair amount of free time to wander Germany, we set out for the Rhine River to experience the lovely villages, castles and wineries of the region. One stop was Rudesheim, billed as a romantic tourist haven by our trusted van drivers. “Shopping” is the actual description they gave.
A cable car ride up to the Niederwald Monument sold us on the stop at Rudesheim. (For the record, the skies were clear and blue – no volcanic ash in sight.) This very large monument, (132 feet high, 120 feet wide) was completed in 1883 to commemorate the re-establishment of the German empire:

Up top at the Niederwald we enjoyed the surprisingly sunny, warm and crisp afternoon atop a hill overlooking the Rhine. We took many photos, made many calls back home and reveled in the views.
We never get far from our work. We soon discovered that lights in the monument viewing area were LED. Made with Cree LEDs!

Seems each person in our group had to inspect the lights:

And, we took some “official” photos just in case Rudesheim wants to join the LED City® program. That’s my professional angle anyway.

| April 6, 2010 |
Details on upcoming LED City Council meeting at Light + Building
By Deb Lovig |
The next LED City® Council Meeting will be held April 14 during the international Light +Building trade show, which is being held April 11-16 at the Messe Frankfurt exhibition site in Frankfurt, Germany. This meeting will feature speakers from two German cities – Bremen and Flensburg – as well as Ann Arbor, MI, and the Clinton Climate Initiative.
Not only will attendees hear from their peers about the benefits of LED lighting, they will be able to visit the booths at L+B to see the latest and greatest LED lighting products. We’ll post the meeting presentations on the LEDCity website after the meeting so everyone can get a glance at what we shared. Here’s some more information about the companies showing their LED lights at L+B.
| March 9, 2010 |
Indian Wells, California saves money and energy with LED lights
By Ginny Skalski |
Most people who visit Indian Wells, California, are probably drawn in by the four world class resorts, the spas and the lush golf courses. The resort community in the southern California desert became a retreat for celebrities after Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz opened the Indian Wells Hotel in 1958. Since then, city officials have worked to make Indian Wells a premiere destination in the Coachella Valley.

These days, city officials are keen on sustainability, and energy-use reduction has become a key goal for the city. I had the “tough” job of visiting Indian Wells last month for an LED City® Council meeting, and while I was there I had the city’s management analyst Susan Weisbart give me a tour of some of the city’s LED lighting installations.
Indian Wells was the first California city to become an LED City. The LED City program helps municipalities speed up the adoption of energy-saving LED lights by connecting them with information they need to make informed decisions about installing LED lights.
One of the first LED lighting installations in Indian Wells involved swapping out incandescent lights that lit the outside of city hall and other municipal buildings with 12 Watt Cree LR6™ recessed lights. It’s a change that city officials say saves nearly $7,000 a year in energy costs. That’s not counting the maintenance savings of not having to replace burned out bulbs, since the LED lights they installed are designed to last 50,000 hours – or 17 years if they’re on 8 hours a day!
The city also has plans to replace the 50 Watt halogen lights illuminating the signature palm trees lining city streets with 11 Watt LED lights. Get this: The city estimates it can save $10,095 in energy costs per year once the project is complete!
Watch my LED tour and interview with Susan to see what Indian Wells is doing to save energy and money:
