Landscape & Urban Design Issue 28 2017 | Page 32

“A marriage made in heaven” is how fibre optics specialist Starscape describes the combination of modern LED lighting and optical fibres. “LEDs offer economy and long service life, while fibre optics allow you to reduce the number of potential failure points in an installation and to distribute light from easily accessible nodes around the site,” says Starscape's sales director Peter Fagan. “Traditionally, the great problem with embedding lights of any kind in a structure is what you do when they fail,” explains Fagan. “Replacing a single failed light fitting may be difficult from a technical perspective and as the years go by there's also the issue of being able to actually find a matching replacement.” However, since fibre optics allow you to separate the light generation from the light output you can bypass this potential problem, he reasons. As long as the LED-based light source is accessible, maintenance is no challenge, and in the worst case Starscape scenario a failed light source can be replaced in a matter of seconds. “One of the unique features of fibre optic lighting is that you can promise your client that by the time a light source is eventually needs replacing, the new unit will almost certainly be more powerful, more economical, more versatile and probably cheaper than the original model,”says Fagan. “So, instead of having built-in obsolescence, you have an open-ended upgrade path.” Starscape's compact LED-based light sources can illuminate up to around 450 x 0.75mm fibres (larger models have capacities in excess of 1000 fibres), and these can be used individually to create hundreds of “star” points in paving, decking or walls or they can be grouped in bundles to form larger points of light in formal steel paver/deck fittings. Or, use the fibres to illuminate glass tiles set into the ground or wall. The electrical part of the project may be as simple as plugging the light source into the nearest socket, but Starscape expects solar-powered light sources to become more common in the near future. The more sophisticated light sources have DMX functionality allowing for full integration with home automation systems, and lighting effects range from subtle to very dynamic. “The premium quality fibre which we use allows us to project light to 15 metres quite comfortably, or as far as 20 metres at a pinch,” explains Fagan. “Over longer distances the issue is not – as you might expect – light attenuation, but rather colour shift, as white light starts to take on greenish hues. This happens because attenuation affects different frequencies at different rates.” Northumberland-based Starscape has customers in around 30 countries worldwide. www.starscape.co.uk [email protected] tel 01289 332900. Simple shapes and primitive geometries characterize the range “Tailored” by Matteo Thun, from the creative collaboration between Simes and the prestigious italian architect and designer. A perfect balance between sustainable and diverse material expressions: the range was developed using a combination of wood teak that conveys a warm effect and the minimalist lines of aluminium, new finishes specifically dedicated to improve the quality of the lighting performance. Natural elegance and lighting poetry that dress with charm the environments with an unmistakable style. Thun Video interview 32 Landscape & Urban Design