Schedule of Events
Specifying Sustainable Luminaires at the Midway Club
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2:00 pm - 3:00 pm : Specifying Sustainable Luminaires
About this Course:
Specifying Sustainable Luminaires presented by Scott Roos
This presentation provides an overview of the elements of sustainability and how to best specify sustainably designed luminaires. By the end of the course, attendees should:
- Be able to recognize the key elements of sustainability & their impacts including Embodied & Operational Carbon, Materials Responsibility & Workplace Social Responsibility
- Be able to distinguish between the various Materials Transparency disclosures including Declare labels, Health Product Declarations and Manufacturer's Letters.
- Understand the luminaire related sustainability requirements of WELL, LEED and The Living Building Challenge
- Be able to apply the principals discussed to specify the most environmentally responsible lighting equipment for your project.
Schedule of Events
** UPDATED COURSE ** Value of Embedded Controls at the Midway Club
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3:30 pm - 4:30 pm : Value of Embedded Controls
About this Course:
Value of Embedded Controls presented by Jim Phelan
Small control zones provide increased application flexibility and granularity of control. Embedded controls are redefining how spaces are designed to meet the ever-changing needs of today’s building. This course will demonstrate the importance of embedded lighting controls focusing on design, specification, and installation delivering significant value to customers. By the end of this course, attendees should be able to:
- Define embedded controls and their place in the market
- Recognize the value of embedded lighting controls
- Demonstrate the true cost of embedded controls for an application
- Identify how to select and specify the right controls for your space
Schedule of Events
Human Centric Lighting at the Midway Club
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5:00 pm - 6:00 pm : Human Centric Lighting
About this Course:
Human Centric Lighting presented by Scott Roos
This presentation is an introduction to Human Centric Lighting to optimize design aesthetics, increase productivity, and improve the health and well-being of humans in an architectural environment. By the end of the course, attendees should:
- Be able to apply accurate terminology to describe the color and color temperature of light.
- Understand the limitations of CRI and learn about better methods to characterize the color rendering of light sources.
- Gain an understanding of the growing body of research on the relationship between light, human circadian rhythms, wellness, and productivity.
- Learn how to harness LED technology to create optimized human-centric lighting.