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Old Posted Apr 21, 2007, 11:29 AM
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NY: Lighting the Empire State

NY Times

Seeking a High-Tech Way to Put Fresh Colors at the Top of the City



The test of the three light systems in the predawn hours on Friday. Two companies will bid for a $5 million contract to supply the new lights for the Empire State Building.


By GLENN COLLINS
April 21, 2007

Before most of Manhattan could shake itself out of bed, the great Empire State Building light-show smackdown — an eerily silent rainbow of shifting color high above the city that continued for 71 predawn minutes yesterday — had its finale an hour before sunrise.

At stake was a $5 million contract to bring 21st-century illumination to the city’s tallest skyscraper. And so, four blocks away from the building that jutted into the clear night sky, in a command center 28 floors above depopulated streets, walkie-talkies squawked as the building’s management witnessed a Kong vs. Godzilla face-off between two lighting behemoths.

“Now that’s a red,” said James T. Connors, the general manager of the Empire State Building Company, observing solid test-pattern blocks of color as they bathed nine floors in light. Primary hues soon yielded to vibrant stripes, spectrum cascades, strobe effects and programmed sequences called “Fourth of July,” “New Year’s Eve” and “Fireworks.”

Above, on the narrow 72nd floor parapet of the skyscraper at Fifth Avenue and West 34th Street — which is ordinarily dark after midnight — the two contenders, Color Kinetics Inc. and Philips Electronics, had installed test stands of high-brightness light-emitting diodes, or L.E.D.’s.

The test marked the beginning of a high-tech future for the landmark skyscraper. For more than a quarter century, the color of the floodlights has been changed by teams of maintenance workers. More than 200 times a year, the workers brave the elements for six hours to install, by hand, colored plastic lenses on 208 10,000-watt upward-facing floodlights on the 72nd and 81st floors, and more lights in the spire.

In the future, the building will be flooded in “intelligent illumination,” employing a new generation of computer-controlled L.E.D.’s capable of producing millions of colors and an infinity of patterns.


Yesterday’s test began at 3:58 a.m. Floors 72 to 81 on the western face were illuminated: Color Kinetics on the northern portion of the face, and Philips to the south.

The competition demonstrates “nothing less than the digitalization of an entire major industry, replacing archaic mechanical illumination with smarter lighting,” said William Sims, president of Color Kinetics Inc. of Boston, which has lighted the Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles International Airport and the Broadway musical “Wicked.”

The new L.E.D.’s “would allow us to showcase the building in many new ways,” said Mr. Connors in the command center at West 38th Street and Broadway.

Lighting is part of a years-long, $400 million refurbishment of the building’s infrastructure and interiors that, he hopes, will “positively affect the perception of the commercial aspects of the building,” which has 102 public floors and was visited by four million tourists last year.

Lighting at the Empire, as its employees call the building, has long marked a complex annual ritual: blue and white for Hanukkah, red and green for the December holiday season, yellow and white for spring, and green for St. Patrick’s Day. Often the calendar has been punctuated by special events, as when the building went blue in honor of the passing of Frank Sinatra, Ol’ Blue Eyes. And it has been lights-out for decades during migratory seasons for birds.

The skyscraper’s lights were first turned on by President Herbert Hoover on May 1, 1931, when he pressed a button in Washington, D.C. By 1956, revolving beacons, called Freedom Lights, were installed to symbolize peace. Floodlights washed the side of the building in white for the 1964 World’s Fair, and colors arrived in 1976 for the Bicentennial.

In January, at a previous face-off, both companies were sent back to the drawing board to improve their colors, especially white. This time, “we were psyched and excited” about the test, said Govi V. Rao, general manager of Philips’s North American solid-state lighting division. The company, which is based in Amsterdam, has lighted such places as Buckingham Palace in London and Dolmabahce Palace in Istanbul.

The test lights — light-emitting silicon chips encased in plastic and glass lenses less than an inch wide — are grouped in frames, and can be switched on and off thousands of times a second in various computer-controlled sequences that the brain interprets as distinct colors.

The lights are expected to last 5 to 10 years; they have cut the cost of illuminating other buildings 10 to 50 percent.

Mr. Connors said the test was a success, and that “the L.E.D.’s outperformed the floodlights,” but he reserved opinion on the winner, which will not be decided until the companies bid for the job. Installation could begin as early as the fall for a debut in 2008.

As a beacon, the building has a civic role, Mr. Connors emphasized, and “we’re not planning for this to be a billboard or a commercial venue.”

But the new illumination “would give us the flexibility to change colors at the push of a few buttons,” he said, on a computer console, laptop, or even a hand-held computer. “The building could change color on the hour, so that you could have a clock tower without a clock. Or we could have a light show — in sync with music that could be simulcast on radio.”

Not every New Yorker may welcome a transformation from the stately former lighting. Ric Burns, the filmmaker who directed the World Trade Center documentary “The Center of the World,” said, “It’s scary to think that we could have a zebra-striped or a leopard-spotted Empire State Building. However, if they do something garish and vulgar, the people will make their voice felt.”

He added: “But when they changed the lighting on the George Washington Bridge, it was fantastic. And if you’ve seen the Eiffel Tower sparkling with lights — it takes your breath away.”



Michael Nagle for The New York Times
Tests early on Friday compared three methods of illuminating the Empire State Building. On the building’s left face were its existing lights; in the center, the light-emitting diodes of Color Kinetics; on the right face, those of Philips.


Video: http://video.on.nytimes.com/?fr_stor...bd757b12b38394
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Old Posted Apr 21, 2007, 11:33 AM
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NY Times

Some Old-Fashioned Guys for an Old-Fashioned Job



Maintenance workers putting filters on the floodlights that currently illuminate the Empire State Building.


By GLENN COLLINS
April 21, 2007

Before dawn yesterday, two electricians and a supervisor changed colors on the Empire State Building’s north face during the test of new light-emitting diodes, or L.E.D.’s, to provide a visual comparison. To do it, they climbed out office windows to switch the colored filters called gels atop floodlights installed on the parapets.

Changing the gels: it has been a way of life for maintenance workers at the building since its lighting was colorized in 1976, when red, white and blue celebrated the nation’s Bicentennial. It will soon be a thing of the past, as the building installs a new, high-tech lighting system.

On a recent afternoon a crew of five showed how it has been done for years, installing 15 blue gels in a bank of floodlights on the 72nd floor.

The gels — 30-inch-wide circles of weather-resistant Lexan plastic — are the size of delivery pizzas and are designed to snap onto the 3-foot-tall drumlike floodlights with their metal halide lamps.

Changing the gels is labor-intensive, requiring the effort of six workers toiling for six hours, while the lights themselves are electricity hogs. The new light-emitting diodes will give off less heat and last far longer than the metal halide lamps.

“And you can program the lighting patterns on a keyboard,” said Hani J. Salama, the building’s director of operations.

Though they need some maintenance, the new L.E.D.’s would significantly reduce the electricians’ exposure to driving rain and slippery ice.

Crews are accustomed to snow that floats heavenward in updrafts, and drifts that bury the building’s parapets to the top of the floodlights.

In early evening, bats have sometimes congregated on high, and “there are also hawk attacks,” said Bill Tortorelli, the building’s 63-year-old chief electrician. Several electricians recalled the time a few years ago when they counted 21 hawks wheeling around the building; one of them dive-bombed, but missed, the workers, said Jake Nouel, 54, an electrician who has been changing the gels for 27 years.


Then there was the time that “one of the workers lost his teeth in the snow on the parapet, and we had to wait for the thaw to find them,” Mr. Tortorelli recalled.

After the L.E.D. installation is complete, most likely in 2008, the electricians will be reassigned to other maintenance duties, Mr. Tortorelli said, adding, “No one will lose a job, because there’s so much to do inside the building.”

But, in a funny way, they will miss the gels. “The views of the city, the fact that these colors were important to New York, and that we had a part in it — well,” Mr. Nouel said, “it was fun, even when the hawks came at us.”

He sighed. “We’ll do other things now, so it will be different. But it won’t be as glamorous.”
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Old Posted Apr 21, 2007, 5:35 PM
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Nice!! I love it!
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Old Posted Apr 21, 2007, 7:41 PM
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It is great. Good thing too that nobody will lose their job.
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Old Posted Apr 22, 2007, 1:23 AM
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so is it going to be illuminated 24/7 then? b/c turning it off at midnight sucks.

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Old Posted Apr 22, 2007, 1:55 AM
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I doubt that the ESB will extend the illumination beyond Midnight even with the new LEDs. Here's some additional info. from the ESB web site:

"During spring and fall bird migration seasons and particularly on cloudy, humid and/or foggy nights, when large numbers of birds are seen flying near the building, the tower lights are turned off. Observatory personnel on the 86th floor outdoor deck notify the engineers. The birds are attracted by the lights and there is a danger they will fly into the building and be killed."
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Old Posted Apr 22, 2007, 5:20 AM
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From the pictures, Phillips looks like the best color intensity. they are definitely better than the floodlights.
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Old Posted Apr 22, 2007, 9:53 PM
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Quote:
But the new illumination “would give us the flexibility to change colors at the push of a few buttons,” he said, on a computer console, laptop, or even a hand-held computer. “The building could change color on the hour, so that you could have a clock tower without a clock. Or we could have a light show — in sync with music that could be simulcast on radio.”
Similar lighting is planned for the Freedom Tower, so this will help the Empire State keep up with the changing times...
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Old Posted Apr 22, 2007, 9:54 PM
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Originally Posted by LSyd View Post
so is it going to be illuminated 24/7 then? b/c turning it off at midnight sucks. -
For a while, after 9/11, it was on 24/7. It was a comfort to so many people.
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