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Effective, Energy-Efficient Lighting for Retail Stores
The main tasks in any retail space are buying and selling. The lighting system in your store must be designed to facilitate these tasks. Retail lighting should attract customers into your store, help them evaluate the merchandise, and help your sales people complete each sale quickly and accurately. Research has shown that lighting installations that are carefully designed with these three factors in mind will actually increase retail sales. Lighting also provides your customers with instant cues about the type of store they are entering. Therefore, lighting may be very different in a "mass merchandise" store, such as K-Mart or Wal-Mart, than it is in a department or mall store, such as Macy's or the Gap.

Your contractor should keep the following issues in mind when selecting lighting for your retail store:
- High "color-rendering" lamps should be used. Whether selecting
lighting for a grocery store or a department store, it is important for
your contractor to choose lamps (light bulbs) that make colors appear as
"natural" as possible. The measure to look for when selecting
lamps that will render colors accurately is CRI (color rendering
index). This is found on a lamp's packaging or in the
manufacturer's catalog. CRI of lamps range from a low of 1 to high
of 100. In retail lighting, your contractor should select lamps
with a CRI of 80 or above. There are standard and halogen
incandescent, fluorescent, and metal halide lamps that meet this CRI
value.
- Lighting fixtures should limit glare. For customers to comfortably examine
merchandise and sales people to work without eye strain, your contractor
should choose lighting fixtures carefully and install them
properly. For a store's "general lighting," fixtures should be
chosen that limit the shoppers' view of the lamp itself, such as
louvers, baffles, and lenses. This cuts down on the glare
(uncomfortable brightness) of these fixtures. For "accent
lighting," lighting aimed directly at merchandise, lamps with "narrow"
beams (often called "spot" lights) should be selected as well as
fixtures in which the lamp is recessed or set-back from the fixture's
opening. Also, your contractor should make sure this lighting is
not aimed directly toward aisles or doorways where they could shine
directly into shoppers' eyes.

- Light should be distributed where it is needed. Many types of merchandise in a
store are displayed vertically (hanging or on shelves). It is
important for your contractor to select fixtures that will properly
provide lighting on vertical surfaces. This can be done by using
adjustable fixtures that can be aimed toward shelves or vertical
displays, selecting ceiling-mounted fixtures that are designed to direct
some light to the sides rather then directly down, or by incorporating
lighting into display cases or shelving units. It is also
important to make sure that the general areas in the store where people
need to walk and move through displays are evenly lighted and appear
bright to customers. Your contractor should make sure that the
general lighting fixtures are installed in accordance with the
manufacturer's "spacing criteria."
- Lighting should draw customers to merchandise. One mistake that is often made in stores is to use "spot" or "accent" lighting, such as halogen reflector lamps, everywhere. These create a feeling of visual clutter and can be confusing to customers. Light can be a very effective way of drawing a customer's attention to areas of the store you want them move toward. For example, it is very effective to light important displays and sales counters to a higher level (sometimes as much as 5 times more light) than the general areas of the store. If your contractor limits accent lighting to these two store areas it will be much more effective in catching a customer's attention.
Read the case studies below to see how improved lighting can affect your businesses' operations and bottom line.
Use the tools listed below to learn more about effective, energy-efficient lighting.
Design Guides
Case Studies
Reference Guides
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