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by Reason077 2914 days ago
I think this is a big problem in lots of cities. LEDs have clear advantages in energy efficiency and reduced maintenance costs and their use should be encouraged. But municipalities seem to be seduced by ultra-bright, blue-white LEDs because of the perceived "modern" look and because of the perception that it improves security.

While we'll never be going back to the orange glow of high-pressure sodium street lights, perhaps a compromise can be found. How about specifying 'halogen-match' (~2700K) colour temperature LEDs for street lights? White enough to create a secure environment, but warm enough not to quite resemble daylight and all the sleep-disturbing, wildlife-disrupting problems that come with that.

Another issue is the way that LED street lights are designed causes a huge amount of glare. Often as a pedestrian or driver, your line of site is directly into the LED matrix itself. With old-style street lights, reflectors or diffusers were typically used to reduce glare, but those have been done away with.

1 comments

I believe that the highest lumens-per-Watt LEDs are higher color-temp, sadly, so I would think that the streetlights were optimized mainly for sheer output, and the cold, daylight temp was just a side effect. I doubt there will be a lot of enthusiasm for pulling down new, long-lasting LEDs, but possibly colored lenses could be retrofit to them...