Philips Lighting has supplied a series of LED street lights which have been installed in Ede, a town in the Netherlands. The company claims that Ede is "the first municipal council in the world to use lampposts with LED technology for public lighting."
The Philips Equinox street lights comprise two optical modules on a 4 m tall square-section mast. The optimum spacing of the street lights is 8 m apart, which provides an average ground illumination of 10 lux.
Each optical module contains 18 white and amber LEDs - six 3W white Luxeon III LEDs and 12 amber 1W Luxeon I devices, supplied by Lumileds Lighting. The luminaires are available in a series of factory-selected color temperatures - 2700 K, 3200 K or 4000 K - to provide warm white lighting.
The back of the luminaire housing has a distinctive radiator-like appearance to ensure adequate heatsinking of the LEDs. Uniform illuminance on the ground is achieved using high efficiency collimating "meniscus" optics.
Four lampposts have been installed by Ede local council, which will monitor the project to gain experience for future lighting systems. In the long run, LED lighting is likely to replace a large proportion of the lamps used in Ede.
By 2008, Philips expects that luminaries incorporating LEDs will also be available for residential areas and major roads.