Date Announced: 17 Nov 2011 Paris, Tokyo—Toshiba Corporation (TOKYO: 6502) today announced that it has completed the first stage of renewing external lighting at the Louvre, the world’s most popular art museum, and that the Pyramid, the three pyramidions and the Colbert pavilion of the Louvre will be suffused with the warm glow of new LED lighting on December 6. As the conventional exterior lighting of The Louvre reaching to end of its life, the museum recognized the value of replacing the old, high energy xenon lighting with energy-efficient, environmentally friendly LEDs. Toshiba has delivered and installed its latest LED products and fittings and designed the lighting to bring out the intrinsic beauty of the museum. Fittings include high beam-lamps to illuminate the Pyramid and the palace walls. Work on replacing the museum’s old lighting will continue. The remaining facades of the Napoleon Court will be completed in the first half of 2012, and the courtyard will follow in 2013. Toshiba will provide a total of 3,200 LED light fittings to replace 4,500 xenon lighting fittings, and they will cut annual power consumption for the exterior lighting by 73%, from 392,000 to 105,000 watts.Toshiba recognizes LEDs as the lighting of the future, and is taking its new lighting system business to the global level. Toshiba aims to secure sales of 350 billion yen in FY2015. As one of the world’s foremost eco-companies, Toshiba Group takes a proactive approach to creating value and promoting lifestyles in harmony with the Earth. In line with this principle, the company ceased production of general incandescent bulbs in March, 2010. Toshiba will further promote environmentally conscious management by working to mitigate global warming and make efficient use of resources.For more information, please visit the Toshiba websitehttp://www.toshiba.co.jp/lighting/about/louvre.htmAbout the Louvre MuseumThe Louvre Museum, the French national museum since 1793, is one of Europe’s oldest and most storied art museums. It is also one of the world’s largest museums, and the most visited, opening its doors to 8,500,000 people a year. The museum is part of “Paris, Banks of the Seine”, which was registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991.
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