logo
Offices ditch harsh fluorescent lights. New tech is on the way.

Offices ditch harsh fluorescent lights. New tech is on the way.

Mint22-04-2025
Glaring fluorescent lights in the office are on the way out. The technologies coming in promise to do much more than make everyone look better.
Improved, and potentially more healthful, lighting is high on the list for companies and building owners trying to lure employees back to offices after an era of remote work. They are investing in new technologies such as faux skylights that mimic natural light—complete with a virtual sun and moon—and adjustable illumination systems designed to sync with employees' circadian rhythms.
'We've known for a long time that natural light is better and makes people feel better, so it's not a completely crazy idea," says Peter Cappelli, a professor of management at the Wharton School.
Aside from psychological benefits, research studies have shown that light can have an impact on nonvisual brain function during cognitive tasks, particularly those that involve sustained attention. Office-lighting revamps are expensive—installing some of these technologies can add 20% to 30% to the cost of a project, those in the industry say—and it could take time for them to become mainstream. Here's a preview of technologies coming to the workplace.
Playing into post-Covid wellness trends, office designers are exploring so-called circadian lighting to sync with the body's circadian rhythms—the biological clocks inside our cells that time when we sleep and wake. Expect to see illumination that can be tuned by intensity—brighter or dimmer—and 'color temperature"—cooler or warmer—throughout the day to mimic the light outdoors.
Efforts to develop such lighting took off after researchers in the early 2000s discovered photosensitive cells in the retina that detect light generally below the level of our awareness, says George Brainard, a professor of neurology at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. Those photoreceptors, independent of vision, can affect biology and behavior, researchers found.
'We have seen a huge uptick in requests," says Jake Pack, an architectural lighting and materials specialist at Seattle-based SeaTac Lighting & Controls. SeaTac worked with JPC Architects to install a mix of tunable LED lighting at the Seattle headquarters of Hargis Engineers. The mix includes cylinders mounted from the ceiling with technology that allows users to control color intensity and temperature. In this case, the lighting is preprogrammed by the company rather than tuned by individual workers.
The lighting will in theory help employees keep melatonin and serotonin levels in balance. But Hargis Engineers also wanted to showcase the technology for clients and its design staff, says Brendon Inman, a principal at the company. 'As engineers, we're always trying to have the cool new stuff within our space."
Faux lighted windows give the illusion of a blue sky outside, fading to a sunset over the course of the day. Skylights show a virtual sun. At night, office workers see what appears to be the moon.
'I was always fascinated by trying to make stuff look more realistic," says Jonathan Clark, chief executive of Innerscene, a San Francisco-based lighting equipment manufacturing company that makes the products Circadian Sky and Virtual Sun. Clark, who previously co-founded a company that made videogames and who worked with Sony to develop 3-D graphics libraries for the PlayStation 2, likens the concepts to how virtual reality works.
The windows and skylights are intended for office spaces with little natural lighting. Floors in multistory-buildings that otherwise wouldn't be able to have skylights, or where light is blocked by nearby skyscrapers are also potential uses. While prices vary depending on location and contractor, the products range from around $1,000 for the smallest, lowest-end versions to $15,000 for the largest and highest-end, Clark says.
In March, Innerscene announced its next product: sensors that sample the color and intensity of the sky and wirelessly transmit that data into the artificial windows and skylights to show the same view.
Won't some workers find the illusions a bit odd and even eerie? 'It's really rare that we don't get 'Wow,' " Clark says.
Forget industrial-style banks of fluorescent lights. Companies are turning to more variety to bring a 'home" vibe into their offices and provide different working venues.
Working from a desk, soundproof booth or lounge area demands different types of lighting, says Jonah Takagi, an industrial designer who teaches lighting at the Rhode Island School of Design. He envisions offices using cordless rechargeable lamps seen in homes to allow employees to dock anywhere with their preferred lighting during the workday.
At LinkedIn's offices in Sunnyvale, Calif., and in Omaha, Neb., workers can go into private focus rooms or break rooms and, with a remote control, tailor the intensity and color gradient of the light. 'It's all about giving employees more control over their space," says Kelly Dubisar, a design director at architecture, design and planning firm Gensler, which worked with LinkedIn on its offices. Gensler sought to incorporate aspects of chromotherapy, a treatment that aims to boost mood and well-being with exposure to certain color and lighting combinations, Dubisar says.
Adjustable lighting in conference rooms is on the rise, says Jean Chandler, senior director of design at Industrious, a division of commercial real-estate services and investment firm CBRE Group that provides co-working and other flexible-work spaces. For video calls, for example, a push of a button dims the central overhead light by 20% so that faces at the table have ample glow without shadows. Meanwhile, lights at the edges of the room darken by 50% to allow the participants on video to stand out.
Imagine passageways that glow with lights leading from office areas to amenity areas such as a gym or game room.
'The intent is to give a real disconnect from your working environment as you're taking a break," says Jason Romine, an associate principal at JPC Architects, which worked on such lighted 'portals" for T-Mobile in Kingsburg, Calif., and Irving, Texas. The light portals started out in 2021 as purely functional bridges between different areas but have since evolved to include design elements such as tree imagery.
Clients now increasingly ask about the portals on new projects, Romine says. 'It's really become something that they gravitate to as both a wayfinding element and this kind of demarcation of place and time."
Welcome to windows that tint themselves to cut down the sun's glare.
On the 25th floor of The Eight, a new high-rise office building in the Seattle area developed by New York-based Skanska USA, large windows controlled with an app that uses artificial intelligence adjust automatically in response to outdoor conditions. The window glass, manufactured by View, based in San Jose, Calif., uses a proprietary coating that reacts to a small electric charge to make the windows tint according to how much light is coming in.
'In Seattle, natural light is at a premium, so we wanted the tenants to be able to always have access to that natural light and also to the views," says Charlie Foushée, executive vice president at Skanska USA's commercial development division.
Write to Ray A. Smith at Ray.Smith@wsj.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US stocks today: Dow, S&P 500 hit record high, UnitedHealth shares jump over 10%. What is driving the surge?
US stocks today: Dow, S&P 500 hit record high, UnitedHealth shares jump over 10%. What is driving the surge?

Mint

time16 minutes ago

  • Mint

US stocks today: Dow, S&P 500 hit record high, UnitedHealth shares jump over 10%. What is driving the surge?

US stocks today: Dow Jones and the S&P 500 hit a new record high on Friday, 15 August 2025, as the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average gained from UnitedHealth shares jumping over 10% on Wall Street. The shares of the insurance firm, UnitedHealth Group, jumped more than 10% on Friday after Warren Buffett's Omaha-based investment giant, Berkshire Hathaway, disclosed its stake in the troubled firm. UnitedHealth Group shares were trading 11.64% higher at $303.08 as of 10:19 a.m. (EDT) on Friday's US stock market session, compared to $271.49 at the previous Wall Street close. In the last five years, the shares of UnitedHealth Group have lost 6.62% in the US markets, and are down 47.85% in the last one-year period. On a year-to-date (YTD) basis, the stock has lost 40.08% in 2025. However, the shares of the firm have given US stock market investors more than 18.98% gains in the last five market sessions on Wall Street. UnitedHealth's market capitalisation (M-Cap) was at $245.88 billion as of the trading session on Friday, 15 August 2025. The shares of the insurance firm hit their 52-week low level at $234.60, while the 52-week high level was at $630.73, according to the data collected from MarketWatch. (This is a developing story. Please check back for updates)

Balcony solar trend in US gains momentum, plug-in kits offer cheaper option, demand seen rising as rooftop credits end
Balcony solar trend in US gains momentum, plug-in kits offer cheaper option, demand seen rising as rooftop credits end

Time of India

time25 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Balcony solar trend in US gains momentum, plug-in kits offer cheaper option, demand seen rising as rooftop credits end

When Oakland resident Terrence Dwyer got a flyer advertising a solar system small enough to fit on his deck — and that plugs into a regular wall socket — he didn't hesitate. 'Absolutely, let's do this right away,' he said. Such 'plug-in' or 'balcony' solar kits, long popular in Europe for their affordability and easy installation, are now gaining traction in the US, AP reported. The momentum is expected to build as President Donald Trump's budget package ends residential rooftop solar tax credits, potentially shifting interest to cheaper, smaller alternatives. Dwyer's $2,000 setup — two 400-watt panels, an inverter, smart meter and circuit breaker — saves him about $35 a month on power bills. 'We like the environmental benefits of solar and wanted to engage with solar in some fashion,' he said. A comparable rooftop system would have cost him $20,000 plus $30,000 in roof upgrades. Regulations, policy push US adoption has been slower than Europe's due to patchy utility rules, low awareness and limited availability. Some utilities require the same interconnection paperwork as rooftop systems, despite plug-in models being designed to prevent power flowing back into the grid. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Benefits of Trading Bitcoin CFDs IC Markets Learn More Undo In March, Utah became the first state to pass a law exempting small plug-in systems from interconnection agreements while mandating safety certification. Republican state Rep. Raymond Ward, who sponsored the bill, said: 'Europe has these things. You can go buy them and they work… there is no reason why we shouldn't have them here.' California-based nonprofit Bright Saver, which sold Dwyer his kit, also offers a $399 model that sold out in six days. 'The interest and demand have been overwhelming,' said co-founder Cora Stryker. Bright Saver and others are lobbying more states for supportive legislation. Affordability vs returns Experts say savings vary widely. UC Berkeley's Severin Borenstein estimates a $2,000 US kit costs roughly $0.20/kWh over 25 years — viable mainly in areas with high utility rates. In Europe, where kits cost around $600, the equivalent rate is $0.05–$0.06/kWh. Baltimore engineer Craig Keenan installed a $399 Bright Saver kit on his balcony in July. 'I'm interested in renewable energy because the amount of carbon emissions we produce is unsustainable,' he said. It will save him about $40 annually and took just 15 minutes to set up. Texas-based Craftstrom has sold about 2,000 kits since 2021, mostly in California, Texas and Florida. China's EcoFlow plans to enter Utah before expanding to other states. 'This is an example of technology being ahead of regulators,' said EcoFlow's Ryan Oliver. Analysts expect demand to accelerate as rooftop solar credits expire. 'Utilities prefer everyone being a predictable and generous consumer,' said UCLA's Robert Cudd. 'Plug-in solar changes that.' Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays , public holidays , current gold rate and silver price .

PM Modi asks scientists to focus on R&D, secure patents for new drugs
PM Modi asks scientists to focus on R&D, secure patents for new drugs

Business Standard

time2 hours ago

  • Business Standard

PM Modi asks scientists to focus on R&D, secure patents for new drugs

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday asked scientists and entrepreneurs to focus more on research and development (R&D) and secure patents for new drugs and medical technologies to ensure self-reliance in the pharmaceutical segment. Speaking from the Red Fort on the occasion of India's 79th Independence Day, PM Modi said that this move will ensure that India not only meets its own healthcare needs but also becomes a global hub of medical innovation. The call comes at a time when India has been lagging behind in terms of R&D spending, according to a Department of Pharmaceuticals (DoP) study paper on industry-academia linkages in the segment. It states that while a number of initiatives for industry-academic linkages in India have produced positive research results over the years, due to their sporadic nature, India's share of world researchers has remained at about 2 per cent, compared to 20 per cent in the US and China. 'An analysis of the share in R&D reveals that in India, the government contributes between 75 and 80 per cent, the private sector contributes 20 to 25 per cent, and universities contribute 3 per cent,' the paper added. In comparison, OECD countries see a 69 per cent contribution from private sector companies, followed by universities at 18 per cent, government contribution at 10 per cent, and non-profit organisations at 3 per cent. Commenting on the issues faced by the pharma industry, Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, executive chairperson of Biocon and Biocon Biologics, told CNBC TV18 that the timeline to take a new molecule from the lab to the market is a very long process, making investments in research and innovation very risky. 'Unless we have very bold regulatory reforms that shorten this lab-to-market journey, we may not see the research investment needed for a country like India,' she added. Calling on the industry to demonstrate India's ability to lead in science, technology, and human welfare, PM Modi also urged the nation to achieve self-reliance in medicines and innovation, highlighting the country's strength as the pharmacy of the world. India currently has approximately 3,000 pharmaceutical businesses with over 10,500 manufacturing facilities, offering around 60,000 generic brands in 60 therapeutic categories. Many Indian pharmaceutical companies are now looking to jump on the generic bandwagon for off-patent molecules, while pressing on plans to develop a biosimilars pipeline post the Covid-19 pandemic. Pharma firms have gone on a generic spree after several blockbuster molecules used in diabetes medications, such as empagliflozin and dapagliflozin, went off patent in the last two years. Major blockbuster molecules that have seen several generic launches in this timeframe include empagliflozin and dapagliflozin, used in diabetes medications, which saw the prices of these drugs fall by 85 per cent in the Indian market. Similarly, companies such as Sun Pharma, Torrent, Lupin, Glenmark, and Dr Reddy's are also working on generic versions of weight loss drugs based on the blockbuster molecule semaglutide, which is expected to go off patent by March 2026. According to the DoP's study paper, more than 300 drug patents in different categories and geographies will be expiring every year during the patent cliff period of 2022 to 2032. 'The patent cliff will provide an opportunity for Indian generic companies to enter the US and other regulated markets and produce more affordable versions of those medications,' the paper added. PM flags obesity crisis in I-Day speech, calls for less oil intake PM Modi on Friday expressed concerns over obesity becoming a future crisis for India, asking people to cut down consumption of cooking oil by at least 10 per cent. India is currently projected to have the third-highest population of overweight or obese people globally, after the United States of America (USA) and China. Asking every family to take the concern seriously, the Prime Minister resolved that the country must protect itself from obesity. 'While many steps will have to be taken, I have made one small suggestion that every family should resolve that when cooking oil comes into the house, it should be 10 per cent less than usual, and its use should also be 10 per cent less. By doing so, we shall make our contribution towards winning the fight against obesity,' he stated from the ramparts of the Red Fort. According to the National Family Health Survey-5 (2019-21), 24 per cent of women and 23 per cent of men in India are overweight or obese, a sharp rise from 20.7 per cent and 18.6 per cent recorded in the NFHS-4 (2015-16), respectively. A recent Lancet study had also predicted that nearly one-third of the country's population, amounting to 218 million men and 231 million women, will be obese by 2050.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store