Date Announced: 09 May 2012 -- Heinmiller, Zaferiou, and Weissman of Lam Partners Win 2011 Edison Award LAS VEGAS -- The 2011 GE Edison Award was presented to Glenn Heinmiller, Paul Zaferiou and Dan Weissman of Lam Partners (Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA) for lighting the United States Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C., USA. A personalized Steuben crystal award for the 29th annual lighting design competition was presented by GE Lighting on May 8, 2012, in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. The GE Edison Award competition is open to those lighting professionals who creatively employ significant use of GE light sources (lamps and/or LEDs) in a lighting design project completed during the previous calendar year. The first permanent home of the United States Institute of Peace is prominently located near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. The translucent wing-like roofs that connect the building's three curving sections presented the most challenging lighting problem: to light the roofs with no visible sources so they glow softly both inside and outside. A pervasive lighting theme, featuring GE T5 fluorescent lamps, is present throughout the building. Light sources are fully concealed or designed to disappear, revealing and animating, but never competing with the architecture. [Photo: United States Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C. Photography credit: Bill Fitz-Patrick/United States Institute of Peace] The roofs are comprised of an outer diffusing glass and an inner white membrane, with structure sandwiched between these two layers. Forward-throw cove fixtures, with GE 54-watt T5 3000 K fluorescent lamps, are mounted in the tops of walls to light the roofs. This single lighting layer simultaneously provides the interior ambient lighting and the exterior surface glow. Above the uppermost windows, necklaces of matching adjustable monopoints with GE 37-watt Precise™ IR MR16 halogen lamps and 39-watt ConstantColor® CMH® PAR20 lamps provide supplemental downlighting. In-grade ceramic metal halide adjustable fixtures illuminate the roof's overhang, seamlessly extending the glow outside to the roof's lowest point. Perimeter offices are fully daylighted, and the clerestories bring daylight into the corridors. Inexpensive T5 fluorescent strips with GE 21-watt T5 3000 K lamps are integrated continuously into the curving base of the clerestories to indirectly light both the offices and corridors. In addition, each office has a custom T5 pendant with shielding, designed to block views into the fixtures from outside or from within the atria. A central lighting control system employs occupancy sensing, daylight sensing scheduling, and local preset scene control. The project is LEED® Gold certified. A prestigious panel of five judges selected this year's winning entry for its superiority in the following categories: functional excellence; architectural compatibility; effective use of state-of-the-art lighting products and techniques; appropriate color, form and texture revelation; energy effectiveness; and cost effectiveness. Judges for this 29th annual competition were:>> Tanas S. T. AlKhoury, Light Concept LLC, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates >> Wendi Bertelsen, LC, LEED® GA, GE Lighting, Glen Allen, Virginia, USA >> Ross A. De Alessi, IALD, MIES, Ross De Alessi Lighting Design, Seattle, Washington, USA >> David Ghatan, IALD, MIES, LC, C. M. Kling & Associates, Inc., Alexandria, Virginia, USA >> Ion Luh, IALD Assoc., Consullux Lighting Consultants, Toronto, Ontario, Canada The winning project was one of three Awards of Excellence finalists. The other Awards of Excellence winners were: >> Cornell University, Milstein Hall (Ithaca, New York, USA) designed by Suzan Tillotson and Christopher Cheap of Tillotson Design Associates (New York, New York, USA) >> Museum of the Bavarian Kings (Hohenschwangau, Germany) designed by Andreas Schulz, Malte Simon and Thomas Möritz of Licht Kunst Licht AG (Bonn, Germany & Berlin, Germany) Also presented at the GE Edison Awards ceremony were five Awards of Merit, one Award for Environmental Design, one Award for Residential Design and two Special Citations. 2011 GE Edison Awards of Merit: Confidential Trading Company (Chicago, Illinois, USA) James Baney, Maureen Mahr, Jennifer Curtis and Kanis Glaewketgarn Schuler Shook (Chicago, Illlinois, USA) Joe and Rika Mansueto Library (Chicago, Illinois, USA) Michael F. Rohde, Dorit Anderle, Stephanie Rock, Alan Al-Salihi and Magdalena GomezL-PLAN Lighting Design (Berlin, Germany)Helmut JahnMurphy/Jahn (Chicago, Illinois, USA) Lighting Experience Center (Budapest, Hungary) Andrea Cerquiglini, Laura Rossi, Simone Alberti, Valentina Strada, Valeria Regazzetti and Arianna AmatoCerquiglini & Rossi Architecture (Varedo (MB), Italy) University of Illinois at Chicago, Daley Library (Chicago, Illinois, USA) Emily Klingensmith, Miory Kanashiro, Kanis Glaewketgarn and Lindsay Jonkers Schuler Shook (Chicago, Illinois, USA) University of Minnesota Amplatz Children's Hospital (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) Tao Ham HGA Architects and Engineers (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) 2011 GE Edison Award for Environmental Design University of Arizona Likins and Árbol de la Vida Residence Halls (Tucson, Arizona, USA) James R. BenyaBenya Lighting Design (West Linn, Oregon, USA) Christian K. Monrad Monrad Engineering (Tucson, Arizona, USA) 2011 GE Edison Award for Residential Design Toro Canyon Residence (Santa Barbara, California, USA) Ann L. Kale and Krista A. Rhodes Ann Kale Associates (Santa Barbara, California, USA) 2011 GE Edison Award Special Citations Louisville Second Street Transportation Project (Louisville, Kentucky, USA) Leni Schwendinger, Eric Chenault and Joseph LegrosLeni Schwendinger Light Projects LTD (New York, New York, USA)Ogden High School Auditorium Restoration (Ogden, Utah, USA) Joseph "Jody" M. Good, IIISpectrum Engineers (Salt Lake City, Utah, USA)
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