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Created for and by architectural lighting designers, Enlighten Europe is a boutique conference experience focusing on the needs of the European lighting community. Blending traditional seminars with innovative workshops and unique collaborative experiences, Enlighten is designed to give attendees skills, tools, and inspiration to immediately apply in their practices.
Join us this November – register now at iald.me/praha16
16:00 - 17:00
Certified Lighting Designer: The Credential of a Mature Profession
Sund
ay
13
No
vem
ber
13:00 - 17:00
Pre-Conference Workshop: Commission Your Design: Lighting Measurements in the Field
09:00 - 10:30
General Session + Keynote by Sakchin Bessette of Moment Factory
10:30 - 11:00
Morning Networking Break
11:00 - 12:00
Concurrent Sessions
12:05 - 13:05
Concurrent Sessions
13:05 - 14:00
Buffet Luncheon
14:05 - 15:00
Concurrent Sessions
15:05 - 15:35
Concurrent Mini Sessions
15:35 - 16:00
Afternoon Networking Break
16:00 - 17:30
Nineteen Short Stories About How
Little We Know About Light
Your LEDs are Poking Me in the Ganglion
Cells!
TBD
Archetypes of Night
Redefinition - The Challenge of Renovating Your
Own Projects with LED
The EU Regulatory Environment for
Lighting
Student Workshop: Methods of Concept
Development in Lighting Design
Lighting Cross Talk: A special session for
designers, specifiers and manufacturers only
Workplace Lighting: What do we Need?
(Your) Body Sensing: an Ecological Approach to
Lighting Design
Free Lunch
The Camera as a Tool for Lighting
Design
Dressing With Light: Lighting
Design in Wearables for a
Near Future
Light AliveDaylighting Canvas: A Tool for
Better Design
Mon
day
14 N
ove
mb
er
09:00 - 10:00
Concurrent Sessions
10:00 - 10:30
Morning Networking Break
10:30 - 11:00
Concurrent Sessions
11:40 - 12:40
Concurrent Sessions
12:40 - 14:00
Buffet Luncheon
14:00 - 15:00
Concurrent Sessions
15:10 - 15:45
Concurrent Mini Sessions
15:45 - 16:15
Afternoon Networking Break
16:15 - Closing Activity
19:00 - Gala Reception
Public Light: Media Façades
and the LED Tsunami
Co-Designing Adaptive Light-ing Scenarios With Unity 5
and Oculus Rift
Thinking Outside the Brick and Mortar:
Challenging The Usual Business Model
The Dark Art: Visual Information
and the Choreographed
Experience
Daylight of Place: The Real and Simulated
From West to East: How to be a Lighting
Designer in Slovakia and Maintain Your Sanity
Artistic Use of LED in the Design of
Luminaires
Maintaining the Future
Lighting Metropolis
Nightscape 2050: A Dialogue Between
Cities, Light and People in the Future
Perceptions of Luminous Colors at Architectural
Scale
Skillful Communication
for Excellent Outcomes
The Camera as a Tool for Lighting
Design
Dressing With Light: Lighting Design in
Wearables for a Near Future
Light AliveDaylighting Canvas: A Tool for
Better Design
*Session details and times are subject to change. All sessions will be presented in English.
Tuesday 15 N
ovem
ber
Pre-Conference Workshop — Commission Your Design: Lighting Measurements in the Field
Craig Bernecker, PhD, The Lighting Education Institute/Parsons The New School for Design, Exton, PA USA
Commissioning a lighting system often addresses the verification and operation of a lighting control system, but rarely the actual performance of the lighting system itself. This hands-on workshop will address measurements in the field that enable you to verify the criteria for which
13:00 - 17:00
SUNDAY 13 November
Keynote — Moment Factory
Sakchin Bessette, Moment Factory, Québec, QC Canada
Trained in photography, Sakchin Bessette co-founded Moment Factory in 2001. Constantly seeking to tell stories in new ways and engaging the public through new media art, he leads the content team at Moment Factory as Creative Director. Sakchin has been the creative lead behind some of the most important productions at Moment Factory, notably the Beatles Revolution Lounge at The Mirage in Las Vegas, Nine Inch Nails Lights in the Sky Tour, the Tiesto Kaleidoscope Tour, Celine Dion’s new show in Las Vegas, the Super Bowl Halftime Show with Madonna, Madonna’s MDNA World Tour, sound and light shows for the façade of the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, a multimedia spectacle for the façade of Antoni Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Barcelona and most recently, the new Tom Bradley terminal at the Los Angeles International Airport.
you designed. Measurement instruments and techniques will be explored for both illuminance and luminance, including cutting edge techniques such as HDR imaging, along with an assessment of the many lighting measurement “apps” that are available for Apple and Android devices.
09:00 - 10:30
MONDAY 14 November
Art — Nineteen Short Stories on How Little we Know About Light
Emrah Baki Ulas, IALD, Steensen Varming, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Lighting design is a profession of many unknowns… even our definition of “light” itself, the wave-particle theory, is a mere attempt to understand the very nature of light. From materials to optics, instincts to cosmos, and reality to perception; this presentation is a colorful journey of how much and how little we know about light and lighting. The nineteen short stories are carefully composed from a wide range of topics important to lighting design, with the aim of enhancing the theoretical and practical knowledge of the participants with relevant information. If you ever wondered “what is brown color?” or “when does light slow down?” or “how to illuminate the earth from space?”… then this session is for you.
Science — Your LEDs are Poking me in the Ganglion Cells!
John Fox, Associate IALD, Fox & Fox Design LLC, Seal Beach, CA USA
This lecture is intended to educate our industry on the latest discoveries of the eye and their photo-reaction to specific photon wavelengths. This new knowledge puts the human race on a collision course with the explosive proliferation of blue chip emission LEDs. Through this session, lighting professionals will be able to make better decisions on when and where to apply human-centric lighting solutions and circadian rhythm knowledge to benefit their customers and our general populace.
11:00 - 12:00
Art — (Your) Body Sensing: An Ecological Approach to Lighting Design
Derek Porter, IALD, Derek Porter Studio + Parsons School of Design, New York, NY USA
Jean Gardner, Parsons School of Design, New York, NY USA
Join a design practitioner/academic (Porter) and a design historian/theorist (Gardner) as they consider the many ways in which our bodies sense geographic place – and how lighting design can encourage this connection to benefit both human health and the health of nature. This session will explore multi-sensorial awareness and ecological design methods that lighting designers can apply in their work. Through this enhanced awareness of how we participate in the living systems that our designs illuminate, we can more effectively design lighting.
Science — Workplace Lighting: What Do We Need?
Peter Raynham, Educator IALD, University College London, London, United Kingdom
Workplace lighting – and workplaces themselves – are evolving. Twenty years ago, we focused on lighting working planes and providing high illuminations; now we focus on lighting interpersonal interactions and meeting task and environmental
illumination requirements. In support of these new aims in workplace lighting, new metrics of lighting have also been established. The first of these is cylindrical illuminance, which can be used to assess light falling on people faces. To control perceived adequacy of illumination (PAI) the metric of mean room surface exitance (MRSE) has been proposed. This presentation will try to navigate the consequences of the adoption of MRSE as a mainstream lighting metric, and ask further questions about the concept of PAI.
Professional Tools — Free Lunch
Mirjam Roos, Associate IALD, Steensen Varming, Sydney, NSW, Australia
As lighting designers, we often rely on independence as a differentiator to win business, and this presentation will discuss independence as a key aspect of today’s lighting design profession. At the same time, our industry has a strong culture of benefits offered by product suppliers; including entertainment and recreational activities not particularly relevant or beneficial to the profession. Tackling the controversial topic of the supplier-designer-relationship, this discussion explores the ethical consequences of accepting such benefits. Does this culture of invitations and gifts drive us to lose our independence and therefore risk the credibility and validity of our
Art — Archetypes of Night
Colin Ball, IALD, BDP, London, United Kingdom
Aspects of current physics are transforming our relationship with the night sky as powerfully as modern lighting is removing it. Centuries ago our ancestors and Gods looked down upon us nightly. Our relationship with mythic aspects of our deep psyche was triggered on a regular basis. This no longer occurs. This presentation will explore myths of the stars, showing how culture was historically born out of the desire for organized humans to represent themselves as the stars. Now that our cities are glowing into the night, recent
profession? When can we call ourselves independent? Can a code of conduct assist in defining independence? Can it positively benefit the perception and differentiation of our profession? Is there really something like a free lunch?
12:05 - 13:05
14:00 - 15:00
photographs are revealing how we still unconsciously represent ourselves at a macro-scale in a mirror image of how we see the sky, the universe.
Science — Redefinition – The Challenge of Reinvigorating Your Own Projects with LED
Johannes Roloff, Licht Kunst Licht AG, Bonn, Germany
Konstantin Klaas, Licht Kunst Licht AG, Bonn, Germany
If a lighting design practice is around long enough, it will eventually be asked to renovate its own projects. Since we entered the age of digital lighting, still learning the characteristics of LEDs, it is a special challenge to apply these to already existing and proven designs. We will show how Licht Kunst Licht AG have renovated their own design, the “Museum Kunstpalast Duesseldorf,” 15 years after its initial opening. The team will share how it solved three major problems with this CFL-to-LED renovation:
maintaining the architectural appearance of the luminaires and lighting mood; achieving the best color rendering possible; and ensuring installation costs didn’t offset the cost-saving benefits of LED systems.
Professional Tools — The EU Regulatory Environment for Lighting
Kevan Shaw, IALD, KSLD, Edinburgh, Scotland
This presentation will examine the current and future regulatory environment as it impacts the lighting design profession. Shaw will look at how regulations have changed lighting over the past several years and what new regulations will directly affect how designers practice. He will also discuss some peripheral areas where regulation is impinging on practice, including green procurement and requirement for BIM in public projects. The discussion will focus on what IALD does to influence regulatory authorities in Europe and how individual designers can keep informed on regulatory issues in the EU and from their own governments.
15:05 - 15:35 Mini Sessions
Light Alive
Jan Tuma, R/FRM, Prague, Czech Republic
Jindrich Ráftl, R/FRM, Prague, Czech Republic
Dynamic. Emotional. Full of contrasts. Light isn’t just a beam of photons in the dark. It can bring rigid objects back to life, as well as tell breathtaking stories. This mini-session from R/FRM studio will explore their interdisciplinary attitude to design, connecting new media art, light design and programming, architecture, and public space. These overlaps of classical disciplines are hiding new lands we want to explore. R/FRM will present light as a dynamic vivid element in a public space that can create another storytelling and emotional layer. Join them in thinking outside of the box.
The Camera as a Tool for Lighting Design
Gavriil Papadiotis, Junior Associate IALD, Lighting Design International, London, United Kingdom
Nowadays, we take smartphone pictures at every turn. But lighting designers know that photography is actually lighting on film (or image sensors) – and it can offer a fresh and inspiring perspective on what we do. Use photography to log your daily experiences and inspiration; take quick site
photos for snagging reports addressed to your contractor; or even selfies on site in the unique locations where you work. In this mini-session, learn various techniques to improve your work routines, take better photos, and inspire your colleagues with your pictures.
Daylighting Canvas: A Tool for Better Design
Ignacio Valero Ubierna, Polytechnic University of Madrid, Estudio Igancio Valero, Madrid, Spain
How do we address complex daylighting projects? Out there it’s kind of a mess. Powerful software promises to do it all; researchers rush to find the one single metric to describe “good daylighting”; salesmen want us to purchase proprietary metrics and tools; and architects expect that light wells will fill an entire basement with daylight. All the while, knocking insistently at the door are a couple of young standards. DAYLIGHTING CANVAS was developed after careful research of what decisions we really make in singular daylighting projects and calculations, and what are the real choices available for each one of them. The result is a protocol that can be plotted by hand in a single sheet showing all the decisions we
make in the form of a design and calculation process, that we can share and modify with the design team. Come learn how.
Dressing With Light: Lighting Design in Wearables for a Near Future
Daniela Toledo Escarate, Daniela Toledo Design Atelier, Santiago, Chile
New technologies have allowed light to express itself in new mediums, reaching even fabrics and other soft materials. This mini-session will analyze the current state of technology for using light as a design material – including a textile designer’s point of view on light as a soft material, as well as current trends that show an increasing interest in manipulating light for both aesthetic and health-related results. Lighting design has traveled far – to robotics, apparel, and textile design – and we should consider how to incorporate outside perspectives for a holistic approach.
Student Workshop — Methods of Concept Development in Lighting Design
Derek Porter, IALD, Derek Porter Studio and Parsons School of Design, New York, NY USA
This workshop leaves behind technique-based lighting applications in support of exploring the richness of concept development. Students will learn how to develop concepts for design through project research that includes understanding of site, cultural and social implications of place, programmatic intent and architectural design.
Students will be given a design problem that allows them to determine unique traits affiliated with their homeland and social background. From here, they will develop lighting schemes and concepts that further root the design in this unique place. The process will substantiate to the group how variations in project context can, and should, influence design outcomes. This workshop will also validate the importance of developing concepts that uniquely ground ideas and the resulting design with the intrinsic properties of the project.
16:00 - 17:30
How can virtual reality become part of your design process? A team from WSP Finland will show you how. In this session, learn how they use virtual reality lighting models – including the Unity 5 game engine and the Oculus Rift VR device – as a means for collaborative design. These approaches enable their firm to work together with clients on important sites, inviting them to experience lighting scenarios through immersive lighting models.
Professional Tools — Thinking Outside the Brick & Mortar – Challenging the Usual Business Model
Andrea Hartranft, IALD, Hartranft Lighting Design, LLC, Charlotte, NC USA
Barbara Horton, FIALD, HLB Lighting Design Inc., New York, NY USA
Anna Sbokou, IALD, Anna Sbokou Lighting Design, London, United Kingdom
What motivates an individual or group of individuals to start a firm? How do you know when the time is right, and once you are ready, how do you even start? This discussion will address the concerns and interests of anyone who owns a firm, is considering starting a firm or even thinks they might
like to start a firm in the future. All three presenters own lighting design firms: one an established firm with many years of experience and a large employee base; one an individual practitioner with liquid boundaries across continents; and one a start-up, less than three years old, with multiple offices. In spite of these differences, all firms are blending traditional brick and mortar offices with remote employee or location management.
We will begin with an overview of corporate structures, and discuss necessary questions and parameters to consider when starting a firm. From there the discussion will progress to the management and motivation of employees and remote offices: what has worked well and what lessons have been learned. We will also discuss how motivated, informed team members can be the difference between a business that just survives and a business that thrives.
Art — Public Light: Media Façades and the LED Tsunami
Charles G. Stone II, FIALD, Fisher Marantz Stone, New York, NY USA
The industrialization of light and subsequent illumination of our cities and towns has created a wealth of light at night. What began as a response to a need for safety at night has now blossomed into a nighttime world of dazzling light. Illumination for security, celebration of architecture, entertainment, advertising: light is all around us at night in the city. The explosive arrival of the LED in exterior lighting and media façades now demands that we step back and examine the world we are making. This talk will explore the evolution and implications of light in the places we meet both friends and strangers... Public Light.
Science — Co-Designing Adaptive Lighting Scenarios With Unity 5 and Oculus Rift
Leena Kaanaa, WSP Finland Ltd., Helsinki, Finland
Olli Poutanen, WSP Finland Ltd., Helsinki, Finland
09:00 - 10:00
TUESDAY November 15
Art — The Dark Art – Visual Information and the Choreographed Experience
Philip Rafael, IALD, Studio Illumine, Shanghai, China
Chris Lowe, Associate IALD, BDP Ltd, Manchester, United Kingdom
What makes a design visually captivating? What are we responding to when we “like” a design? We know the human visual system analyzes a scene immediately, picking up an astounding amount of information from its surroundings. A well-designed lighting scheme can mindfully take advantage of this human ability, creating a hierarchy of focal accents in what can be described as a choreographed visual experience. Darkness is as vital as light in creating this hierarchy, resulting in a visually and mentally stimulating scene that captivates our attention and captures our admiration. This presentation will explore how lighting cues create design hierarchy – and how focal accents can provide these successful scenes.
Science — Daylight of Place – the Real and the Simulated
Pavlina Akritas, Arup, London, United Kingdom
Rohit Manudhane, Associate IALD, Arup, London, United Kingdom
Daylight is fundamental to life. It is unparalleled qualitatively as a source of light, physiologically as it triggers our biological needs, and in sustainability as it is freely delivered every day. There are qualities particular to daylighting design that are embedded in our visual memory of place. With the ever higher degree of urbanization, daylight is becoming a luxury. Advances in lighting technology help us mimic daylight quality & circadian stimulus, and achieve energy savings. This session aims at invigorating this contextual and cultural quality of natural light and how it has been an intrinsic part of the architectural design process historically. It will continue to examine the application of present-day lighting technology to reproduce the natural lighting experience in actual built environment, while taking into account weather conditions of the place in real time.
Professional Tools — From West to East – How to be Lighting Designer in Slovakia and Maintain Your Sanity
Laura Murguia Sánchez, Haz Lighting, Presov, Slovakia
While the title of this topic sounds like a joke, Slovakia has only one independent lighting design studio, so Haz Lighting considers itself a pioneer of the profession. This presentation will share how they used lectures, temporary interventions, discussions, and workshops to spread the word about architectural lighting design – and about good lighting in general. The presentation will share how they collaborated with the Technical University of Košice to reach students, and how they take cultural factors on board when considering how to spread the message about their work.
10:30 - 11:00
Art — The Artistic Use of LED in the Design of Luminaires
Till Armbruester, Licht Kunst Licht AG, Bonn, Germany
The LED can be so much more than just a replacement for traditional sources in traditional luminaire shapes. As head of product design at Licht Kunst Licht, Till will share how LEDs can be used to create totally new designs in products and projects. Till will display artistic product designs and their development process from his time as Senior Designer at Ingo Maurer GmbH, including collaborations with designers such as Ron Arad and Moritz Waldemeyer. He will also explore the design process, including the challenges of large scale design, by sharing recent LKL projects with nonconventional use of LEDs. The session will close with an open discussion, allowing the audience to share their perspectives and experiences on leaving the traditional path of dealing with LED.
Science — Maintaining the Future
Cy Eaton, Associate IALD, Walt Disney Imagineering – Lighting Design & Production, Pacific Palisades, CA USA
As technology swallows the world, lighting maintenance has evolved from a simple task of ladders and bulbs to a complex problem of circuitry,
color rendering, control protocols, and not-so-smart devices. Collectively, these tools have the potential to deliver wonderful illuminated experiences, but their complexity means that poor deployment may result in a public backlash to push us back into the days of sockets and switches. In this session, we will consider the differing roles of designers, manufacturers, and owners in lighting maintenance, and discuss how these roles could evolve in response to industry’s challenging landscape. Join Cy Eaton for an interactive session that blends small group breakouts with full-room conversation. Designers and manufacturers will both come away with a refined sense of responsibility to their clients and collaborators, and a new set of talking points to set client expectations for how quality lighting systems can be preserved over time.
Professional Tools — Lighting Metropolis
Johan Moritz, IALD, City of Malmö/Lighting Metropolis, Malmö, Sweden
In this session, learn about the EU project Lighting Metropolis, a cross-border cooperation to make public buildings smarter and more energy efficient, thereby creating better and more livable cities. The audience will learn why there is an urgent need for a platform for production industry, academia, municipalities, and lighting designers to communicate. Johan will explain the problems and solutions when it comes to specifying and buying lighting products for the public realm with taxpayer money – and will include time for questions and answers at the end of the talk.
11:40 - 12:40
Art — Nightscape 2050: A Dialogue Between Cities, Light and People in the Future
Kaoru Mende, FIALD, Lighting Planners Associates, Tokyo, Japan
To us, a “nightscape” isn’t just the view: it’s humans and cities interacting at night. This presentation aims to explore the interactions between people, light and cities in the year 2050. The emergence of new light sources such as LEDs, OLEDs and lasers, as well as the evolution of lighting control technology, may dramatically change our living environment. Numerous environmental changes have forced a discussion on how to approach energy consumption – including how to power our light; and the use of electric light has greatly impacted the Circadian rhythm of humans and animals, and we face light pollution nearly everywhere. How can lighting design contribute to the creation of wonderful light enjoyed by all people? What can we expect our lighting environment in 2050 to be? As a lighting designer who creates innovative lighting environments, Mende will share what he hopes for the future relationship between light and people.
Science — Perceptions of Luminous Colors at Architectural Scale
Ute C. Besenecker, Student IALD, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY USA
Colored light is increasingly used in architectural installations; LED technology makes luminous color more easily available, and introduces the possibility of manipulating the spectral power distribution of colored and white sources. In the past, luminous colors were achieved by filtering broadband sources; today, colors are mixed using arrays of multiple narrowband LED emitters. Color matches are typically characterized using a color science model (chromaticity) to mix nominally equivalent colors (metamers) using different LED combinations. This talk will introduce research into perceived differences of such equivalent colors. Because chromaticity was not developed for a full field of view, it does not always produce good matches when we experience these colors in space. In this session, learn why these differences occur – and how it can inform your design practice.
Professional Tools — Skillful Communication for Excellent Outcomes
Richard Fallon, London, UK
Skillful communication isthe key to the successful realization of any design project. Whether engaged directly with clients, working with team members, or talking to contractors, precise, clear, and user-friendly interaction will help smooth the way to effective outcomes. Particularly when the going gets tough! In this interactive session, learn how your verbal and non-verbal communication affects your work, as well as skills and behaviors for improving your conversations.
14:00 - 15:00
Lighting Cross TalkA special session for
designers, specifiers and manufacturers
In this interactive 90-minute session, you’ll meet with four different manufacturers alongside other lighting designers in randomly
generated groups. In this no-product, zero-pressure environment, you’ll be able to give candid feedback about the lighting industry, share your wish list for future products and services, hear about the latest
offerings from individual manufacturers, and discuss topics and issues of mutual interest.
An IALD Enlighten exclusive, Lighting Cross Talk is popular with designers as a unique chance to provide honest, open feedback without the pressure
to buy or specify. Manufacturers say it’s some of the best feedback they get all year; and designers say they enjoy improved relationships with these manufacturer
groups long after the conference has ended.
Monday, 14 November16:00-17:30
Sponsorship Opportunities Still Available
An intimate, no-product show with a relaxed atmosphere and a focus on collaboration and communication, IALD Enlighten Europe is a special opportunity for connecting with lighting designers, specifiers, and students.
Contact Kelly Ashmore at [email protected] or visit iald.me/sponsorprague for more information.
Evening Event Sponsorships Own the night and host a party of your creation.
Keynote Speaker Sponsorship
Sponsor Sakchin Bessette’s talk and be one of the first names attendees see at the kick-off event.
Leading Light Sponsorships Support the entire conference and secure a table at Lighting Cross Talk
Register Now Registration to IALD Enlighten
Europe 2016 includes:
• Pre-conference events on Sunday, 13 November
• Access to all seminars and workshops listed in this program
• Opening Session + Keynote Address
• Special evening events and receptions
• Lunch and networking breaks daily
• Closing activity
Register Online At http://iald.me/eneu16reg
(this URL is case sensitive).
IALD and LIRC Members 31 Aug After 31 Aug
Full Conference* € 355.00 € 395.00One Day* € 250.00 € 250.00
Non Members 31 Aug After 31 Aug
Full Conference* € 400.00 € 445.00One Day* € 295.00 € 295.00
Full Time Educators 31 Aug After 31 Aug
Full Conference* € 150.00 € 175.00One Day* € 100.00 € 100.00Educators that € 50.00 € 50.00accompany 5 or more students
Students 31 Aug After 31 Aug
Full Conference* € 50.00 € 50.00One Day* € 35.00 € 35.00
Guests^ 31 Aug After 31 Aug
Full Conference* € 200.00 € 200.00One Day* € 175.00 € 175.00
* All prices are quoted in Euros and are exclusive of VAT.^ A guest is a personal guest, not a business associate or staff member.
Cancellations and requests for refunds must be received in writing by
28 October 2016. Refunds will be returned less a €35 administrative fee.
No refunds will be issued after 28 October 2016, or for no-shows.
Please send requests to [email protected].
Hotel Information
IALD Enlighten Europe will be held at the Prague Marriot, a luxury hotel in the city center with easy access to many of Prague’s most notable attractions, including Wenceslas Square’s art and architecture and Old Town’s vibrant culture. Stay on site with us to enjoy our discounted room block and avoid missing a moment of the conference.
Room Rate –
Single/Double occupancy: 3600 CZK/night
• Valet and on-site parking available• Includes breakfast• Prices exclusive of VAT
Book your room today at http://iald.me/eneu16hotel
Enlighten Europe Content Advisory Group
IALD Enlighten Europe is designed by European lighting designers,
with European lighting designers in mind. This group of volunteers
has worked tirelessly for the past year to help craft this conference.
Our sincere thanks go to:
Tad Trylski,
Associate IALD,
CHAIR Independent
Lighting Designer
London, UK
Rafael Gallego
Aureo Lighting
Madrid, Spain
Christopher Knowlton,
IALD Electrolight
London, UK
Dr. Michael Kramer
LED Linear
Neukirchen, Germany
Johan Moritz, IALD
City of Malmo
Malmo, Sweden
Ms. Laura Murguia
Hazlighting
Prešov, Slovakia
Anna Sbokou, IALD
Anna Sbokou Lighting Design
Athens, Greece
Andreas Schulz, IALD
Licht Kunst Licht
Bonn, Germany
Dr. Gernot Steinlesberger
Traxon Technologies
München, Germany
IALD Headquarters
440 N Wells St.
Ste. 210 I Chicago, IL
60654 USA
+1 312 527 3677
IALD Europe
Avenue Jules Bordet 142
1140 Brussels
Belgium
+32 (0)2 761 1682