Definition
Architectural lighting integrates luminaires into the building fabric as design elements, not just functional necessities. Unlike general commercial lighting where fixtures are ceiling-mounted commodities, architectural lighting treats light as a building material — shaping space, defining volumes, and creating visual hierarchy. Key techniques include cove lighting (concealed linear LEDs washing ceilings/walls), wall grazing (accentuating texture on stone/brick surfaces), façade lighting (illuminating building exteriors for nighttime identity), and integrated architectural elements (handrail lighting, stair tread illumination, recessed floor markers). Architectural lighting luminaires are typically specified by lighting designers rather than electrical contractors, with form factor, finish, and beam precision as critical selection criteria alongside technical performance.
Key Data
| Parameter | Value / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Cove lighting | Linear LED strip (120-240 LEDs/m) concealed in ceiling/wall recess — 150-300 lux indirect ambient |
| Wall grazing | Linear LED placed 100-300mm from wall surface, 15-30° beam — accentuates texture, stone, brick |
| Façade lighting | IP66 linear or spot, 3,000-10,000 lm, RGBW or tunable white, DMX/DALI controlled |
| Typical CCT | 2700-3000K for warm hospitality/classic, 4000K for contemporary commercial |
| CRI requirement | CRI 90+ minimum, R9 >80 for accurate material color rendering |
Application Guide
Hotel lobby
Cove + pendant layers, 2700-3000K, CRI 95+, DALI scene control
Layered lighting creates luxury atmosphere; warm CCT flatters guests
Corporate HQ atrium
Linear LED cove + suspended rings, 4000K, DMX addressable
Architectural statement lighting that reinforces brand identity
Museum gallery
Track + wall washer + cove, 3000-4000K, CRI 95+, UV-filtered
Precision beam control, zero UV damage to artifacts, adjustable as exhibits change
Conclusion & Procurement Recommendation
For B2B architectural lighting procurement: specify exact RAL/Pantone finish colors (not 'white' or 'black' — aluminum finishes vary dramatically between manufacturers), request photometric IES files showing beam distribution at 0°/30°/60° angles, and require 3-step MacAdam ellipse binning for color consistency across long linear runs. Always order 5-10% spare drivers and LED modules — architectural fixtures are custom-finished with 8-12 week lead times; a single failed driver can leave a visible dark section for months if spares aren't on hand.