..........................................................................................................................................
Residential Ergonomic
Lighting
Ergonomic Lighting Levels by Room for
Residential Spaces
by Chris Adams
Ergonomics, as it relates to lighting, is
basically having the right amount and location of lighting for what you're doing.
In the workplace, it can be making sure computer monitors don't have
too much glare on them (to prevent eyestrain) or ensuring that people
performing tasks that require precision and fine-detail work have lighting on a
path that ensures that there are no shadows cast on what they're doing.
In the home, having ergonomic lighting can mean installing task
lighting above kitchen counters or a workbench or making sure that hallways and
stairways have enough lighting in them for safety.
Making Sense of Measurements
You'll find light levels are listed in lumens, which is light output.
Light intensity levels may be listed in lux or foot-candles (fc).
Lux measurements are roughly 10 times a foot-candle measurement,
as a foot-candle is 1 lumen per square foot, and a lux is 1 lumen per square
meter.
Incandescent light bulbs are measured in watts and may not have the
lumen measurement on the packaging; for a frame of reference, a 60-watt bulb
produces 800 lumens.
Fluorescent lights and LED lights may already be labeled in lumens.
Keep in mind that the light is brightest at its source, so sitting far
away from a light will not provide you with the lumens listed on the packaging.
Dirt on a lamp can cut into the light output as much as 50 percent as
well, so it makes a real difference to keep bulbs, glass globes, and shades
cleaned.
Room Lighting Levels
Outdoors on a clear day, lighting is approximately 10,000 lux.
By a window inside, the available light is more like 1,000 lux.
In the center of a room, it can drop dramatically, even down to 25 to
50 lux, hence the need for both general and task lighting indoors.
A broad guide is to have general, or ambient, lighting in a passageway
or a room where you don't perform concentrated visual tasks at 100–300 lux.
Raise the level of light for reading to 500–800 lux, and
concentrate task lighting on your needed surface at 800 to 1,700 lux.
For example, in an adult's bedroom, you need lighting to be lower to
wind down your body for sleep.
In contrast, a child's bedroom may be where he or she studies as well
as sleeps, so both ambient and task lighting would be needed.
Similarly, in dining rooms, the ability to change the number of lumens
through different types of lighting (ambient or over the center of the table)
or dimmer switches can make the space more versatile, from an active area
during the day to a relaxing space in the evening.
In the kitchen, pendant lights above islands and range hoods with
lighting over the stove are additional ways to use task lighting.
The following is a list of minimum lighting levels for residential
spaces.
Kitchen
|
General
|
300 lux
|
Countertop
|
750 lux
|
|
Bedroom (adult)
|
General
|
100–300 lux
|
Task
|
500 lux
|
|
Bedroom (child)
|
General
|
500 lux
|
Task
|
800 lux
|
|
Bathroom
|
General
|
300 lux
|
Shave/makeup
|
300–700 lux
|
|
Living room/den
|
General
|
300 lux
|
Task
|
500 lux
|
|
Family room/home theater
|
General
|
300 lux
|
Task
|
500 lux
|
|
TV viewing
|
150 lux
|
|
Laundry/utility
|
General
|
200 lux
|
Dining room
|
General
|
200 lux
|
Hall, landing/stairway
|
General
|
100–500 lux
|
Home office
|
General
|
500 lux
|
Task
|
800 lux
|
|
Workshop
|
General
|
800 lux
|
Task
|
1,100 lux
|
Chris
Adams
Human factors engineer and industrial
designer
Human systems integration lead at Strata-G
Solutions, Inc.
Experience
Chris Adams is a former writer for ThoughtCo
who wrote about ergonomics for more than nine years. Ergonomics is the study of
how humans effectively interact with their work environment. Chris has more
than 11 years of experience working in the field of human factors and
ergonomics. He was a human factors and systems engineer with Jacobs Engineering
working on NASA's the Ares I and V rocket systems. Chris later became the lead
of human-system integration for Strata-G Solutions, Inc.
Chris specializes in furniture design and
corporate identity and works as an independent consultant on various design
projects. His work for ThoughtCo appears on many websites, newsletters, and
books which focus on engineering spaces for human use.
Education
Chris Adams earned a Bachelor of Industrial
Design (B.I.D.) in Industrial and Product Design from Auburn University in
1999.
ThoughtCo and Dotdash
ThoughtCo is
a premier reference site focusing on expert-created education content. We are
one of the top-10 information sites in the world as rated by comScore, a
leading Internet measurement company. Every month, more than 13 million readers
seek answers to their questions on ThoughtCo.
For more than 20 years, Dotdash brands
have been helping people find answers, solve problems, and get inspired. We are
one of the top-20 largest content publishers on the Internet according to
comScore, and reach more than 30% of the U.S. population monthly. Our brands
collectively have won more than 20 industry awards in the last year alone, and
recently Dotdash was named Publisher of the Year by Digiday, a leading industry
publication.
No comments:
Post a Comment