The Adaptive Lighting Design® Method of Layered Custom Home Lighting
The ADAPTIVE ® lighting design combines 8 complete layers of light to create accent, atmosphere, and functionality within high-end residential dwellings. The compliment and overlap of these lighting layers creates a comprehensive, personalize aesthetic that supports architectural keynotes and highlights decorative schemes and fine art. Equipment is either concealed when possible, or decorative in its nature so as to blend harmoniously with surrounding elements.
Each letter in the word “Adaptive” stands for a unique layer of light applied to the interior or exterior space of the house.
Architecture
Architectural lighting is the first layer of light in our design methodology, and functions as a framework for decoration and activity. Architecture is carefully studied and analyzed to determine what types of equipment should be used. Fixtures can then be mounted in these locations to illuminate space from a variety of angles of incidence. For example, ceiling coves and decorative niches are ideal places to conceal linear lighting strips as sources of indirect light. More prominent features such as columns, clerestory fenestration, and exterior building facades provide firm anchor points for strategically positioned decorative fixtures. The fixtures used to establish this foundation layer of light can be as simple as adjustable accent lights, and recessed ceiling lights, to sophisticated ground well lights mounted outdoors.
Decorative
The purpose of decorative lighting is to draw attention to any distinctive element that makes a building attractive. This lighting layer often involves more than just light. It involves ornamentation in the form of special lighting fixtures. Wall sconces, chandeliers, and ornamental ceiling lights are frequently used in this segment of our design process. Certain rooms in the home are almost always given special emphasis, such as bedroom and dining room ceilings, living rooms, and prominent entry ways. It is also important to selectively highlight any noteworthy decorations such as ornamental mirrors, archways, and doorways. Normally, this can be done very easily, simply by placing appropriately decorated wall sconces on either side of the feature.
Art
The third layer of lighting in the Adaptive Lighting Design® methodology is Art Lighting. This is a very sophisticated discipline that depends on two very important factors. One is the creation of “focal walls” where thematically related pieces of art are hung to create a composite sense of image. Framing projectors are commonly used to do this. On a selective basis depending on the frames used, small linear strip lights can be utilized along with all washing lights and recessed ceiling lights if a large distribution of light is required.
The second important factor in effective art lighting is the illumination of three-dimensional structures and spaces. Display shelves and niches require special fixtures and installation methods to avoid blocking the view of collectibles, prints, art photography, or showcased paintings from shadow. Sculpture and statuary needs both light and shadow properly blended to look truly lifelike under artificial light.
Path
This layer creates pathways for indoor foot traffic out of light itself. Recessed, non-adjustable, sloped-down ceiling fixtures are usually used to create this. Common areas where we add this layer are in hallways, transition areas between rooms, room entrances, and stairwells. The intent is to make these areas safer and simultaneously more attractive.
Task
This is our most “practical” layer of lighting, and it is essential to safety and activity in every home. It is used to transform work areas into safer, more comfortable environments where people can perform tasks with less stress and minimal risk of injury. These areas must be lit whenever possible using affordable sources of lighting. Low-voltage recessed lights, adjustable accent lights, linear strip lights prove ideal for most settings. Adjustability is preferable to avoid glare. Kitchens can be unsafe if too much glare is present, and personal grooming in front of a mirror is difficult if the vanity light is too bright. Laundry rooms, work rooms, and hobby rooms require slightly brighter light than other areas of the home, and stairwells and landings need evenly distributed light so the positions of steps are clearly visible to the eye
Interior Decoration
This layer of lighting is not to be confused with the Decorative Layer we discussed earlier. Interior decoration lighting is just that—the accenting of interior décor with an emphasis on the subject matter at hand, not the fixture used to light it. Recessed, adjustable low-voltage accent lights are an excellent way to illuminate wide variety of forms such as coffee tables, hutches, vases with flower arrangements, armoires, stonework, murals, drapes, and ornamental mirrors.
View
With all these layers of interior lighting inside a home now, windows turn into mirrors that reflect both glare and room contents back to the eye. To offset this, the view lighting layer is then applied to the areas around the property just outside of windows. This enables a person to see through the window into the world beyond. Surface-mounted lights are generally all that is needed for this.
Exterior
This exterior lighting layer is the final component of our lighting design process. It allows us to create a warm, inviting aura around a home that balances building features and with landscape highlights. This helps bring distant focal points into perspective by illuminating the color of variety of gardens, flower beds, and hedges. Waterworks such as fountains, pools, and reflecting ponds can be accented in a manner that creates the impression of a sculpted, albeit, fluid surface. Gazebos, patios, and other exterior structures must also be appropriately lit for visibility and décor.
In most of these instances, surface mounted fixtures are used to create this layer of lighting, although with ponds and fountains it is not unheard of to use special underwater lights to magnify such a feature’s prominence on the landscape. Adaptive Lighting Design ® Group, Inc. works worldwide to create this impeccable, multi-layered aesthetic of complex lighting layers in custom homes and landscapes. Contact Glenn Johnson directly today at 801-274-9600 for more information.