Interior Lighting for Designers

(Elliott) #1
doorway and causing glare (downlight/half
wall-washer) (figure 12.20).
Downlight/wall-wash luminaires have
downlight distributions in three directions vir-
tually unchanged by the kicker reflector. They
work well in small rooms, such as a 10-ft-
wide office where opposite walls are lighted;
the downlight component provides good
modeling of faces throughout the room. The
lighted vertical surface is moderately lighted;
the horizontal and vertical planes appear to
have relatively equal emphasis.

Reflector wall-washers.A greater empha-
sis on the vertical surface is provided by
luminaires that light only the walls without
any significant downward distribution.Reflec-

tor wall-washersmake use of sophisticated
optical systems to provide distribution and
luminance control. There are two kinds of
reflector wall-washers: lensed wall-washers
and open-reflector wall-washers.
Lensed wall-washerscontain a lamp,
preferably a directional source; an internal
kicker reflector; a spread lens; and a bright-
ness-controlling reflector to shield glare (fig-
ures 12.21 through 12.24). Lensed wall-
washers are available for tungsten-halogen
MR and PAR, compact fluorescent, metal
halide, and HPS lamps.
Reflectors that are not circular, para-
bolic, elliptical, or hyperbolic are called non-
focal reflectors.Open-reflector wall-washers
have a compound-contour reflector shape

LUMINAIRES

Figure 12.20Typical room layout using matching-aperture, parabolic, open-reflector downlights and downlight/wall-
washer variations.

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