Prewar United States •
Singer Building, New York (1908): roof outlined with lights, tower floodlighted from base. Building design:
Ernest Flagg. Lighting design
Walter D'Arcy Ryan and Charles G. Armstrong. •
Gas & Electric Building, Denver, Colorado (1910): building facades covered with 13,000 incandescent bulbs, called "The Best Lighted Building in the World." Building design:
Frank E. Edbrooke. Lighting design
Cyrus Oehlmann. •
General Electric Company Building, Buffalo, New York (1912; new lighting scheme 1927): multi-level floodlights, purple lights on tower, revolving searchlights. One of the first color lighting schemes, and one of the first to use large lamps instead of outlining with many small ones. Often lit in particular colors for seasonal and other special displays. Building design:
Esenwein & Johnson. Lighting design Walter D'Arcy Ryan. •
Woolworth Building, New York (1914): multi-level floodlighting, lighting in lantern on automatic increase and dim cycle. Building design:
Cass Gilbert. Lighting design H. Herbert Magdsick, reworked with similar appearance by
Douglas Leigh. •
Wrigley Building, Chicago (1921): floodlighting with revolving beacon, building clad in grey and cream terra cotta of increasingly pale shade with rising height; Chicago's first major floodlighted building and at the time the world's most completely illuminated structure. Illumination increased in 1933 because of advertising effectiveness; more powerful lights installed in the 1980s. Building design:
Graham, Anderson, Probst and White. Lighting design: James B. Darlington. •
McJunkin Building, Chicago (1924): first building to be permanently illuminated in color, design modified to facilitate lighting. Building design: Marshall & Fox,
Arthur U. Gerber. Lighting design:
Edwin D. Tillson. •
San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation Building, Fresno, California (1924): multi-colored floodlighting defining different building levels, roof corner lights, lighted rooftop sign, steam jets. Lighting design: H.H. Courtright, Walter D'Arcy Ryan, and Carl F. Wolff. •
American Radiator Building, New York (1924): amber floodlighting, following a series of experiments. Building design:
Raymond Hood and
André Fouilhoux. Lighting design:
Bassett Jones. •
Pacific Gas and Electric Company Building,
Market Street, San Francisco (1925): floodlighting from adjacent buildings and on setbacks as part of a lighting festival commemorating the 75th anniversary of California statehood. Lighting design:
C. Felix Butte, Hunter and Hudson. •
Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company Building, San Francisco (1925): floodlighting of top segments and lower corner setbacks; terra cotta selected to facilitate lighting and building much publicized as an example. Lighting design: Simonson and St. John, Arthur Fryklund, C. Felix Butte. •
Paramount Building, New York (1926): designed as a "ziggurat" with many setbacks to conceal floodlights; clockfaces with illuminated hands and minute points near the top; glass ball flashed white to indicate the hour, red on the quarter hour, and could be seen from New Jersey and Long Island; described by
The New Yorker as "an incinerator for the ashes of departed movies." Setback floodlighting and ball illumination resumed in 1998. Building and lighting design:
Rapp and Rapp. •
Philadelphia Electric Company Edison Building, Philadelphia (1927): an early use of mobile washes of color, with floodlights fitted with special caps and lenses and separate reactors for each setback to facilitate color changes, and variable dimmer cycles so that colors grew more intense and then faded; initial activation by
Thomas Edison by telegraph relay from his home. Building design:
John T. Windrim. Lighting design:
Arthur A. Brainerd. •
First Methodist Episcopal Church of Chicago, Chicago (1927): "revenue church" with church on ground floor of skyscraper surmounted by Gothic steeple floodlighted behind the buttresses and pinnacles, and bright floodlighting on top of steeple and cross, visible up to 12 miles away. Building design:
Holabird & Roche. Lighting design: W. A. Beile and Co. •
Palmolive Building, Chicago (1929): Chicago's first illuminated setback skyscraper, in Indiana limestone and entirely illuminated as a "monument to cleanliness," with three vertically lighted indented sections in the center of the facade creating a pattern of light and dark stripes; the white lighting gave the building the nickname "La Tour d'Argent." Revolving light on mast at top was a navigation beacon, originally named for
Charles Lindbergh. Building design: Holabird & Root. Lighting design: unknown. •
Chicago Tribune Tower, Chicago (1929): the winning design in the 1922 international competition noted that the upper part was designed with a view to lighting; Bassett Jones envisaged a complex scheme of rose-colored light and silhouetting, giving the "effect [of] Walhalla burning in the skies," but the building was only lit in 1929, five years after completion, and only with gold floodlighting on the crown. Building design: Raymond Hood and
John Mead Howells. Lighting design: Bassett Jones. •
Union Trust Building, Detroit (1929): nicknamed the "Cathedral of Finance," a multi-colored skyscraper with a golden crown, from which a motorized "scintillator" (developed for World's Fairs) of eight moving searchlight beams in magenta, green, orange, and yellow formed patterns in the sky. Building design: Wirt Rowland. Lighting design: William D'Arcy Ryan. •
Chanin Building, New York (1929): a prominent skyscraper planned with illumination in mind, the crown formed of buttresses over a promenade was illuminated from behind, in white light on yellow terracotta, to produce a golden glow that reversed the daytime aspect of the building. Building design:
Sloan & Robertson. Lighting design:
Westinghouse and
Edwards Electrical Construction. •
Merchandise Mart, Chicago (1930): bright illumination of upper stories, varied intensity on lower stories over an unilluminated base, producing a notable example of steady illumination in an era of experimentation with moving colored displays. Building design: Graham, Anderson, Probst and White. Lighting design: unknown. •
Terminal Tower, Cleveland, Ohio (1930): upper half of tower illuminated in white light of varying intensity to show details. Reilluminated in 1979 with a "timid" scheme, replaced in 1981 with golden-white illumination of entire building, at the time the tallest building in the US illuminated from bottom to top. Lights converted to high-pressure sodium in the 1990s, enabling both truer colors and color changes. Building design: Graham, Anderson, Probst and White. Lighting design: unknown. 1981 lighting design
General Electric, John J. Kennedy. •
A. E. Staley Manufacturing Company Administration Building, Decatur, Illinois (1930): mobile color floodlighting, first use of General Electric's
Thyratron tube dimmer, plus revolving beacon on dome. Color display recreated in 1989 with a computer. Building design:
Aschauer & Waggoner. Lighting design:
F. D. Crowther, General Electric (1930);
Lutron Co., Bodine Electric, and Staley Co. (1989). •
Richfield Building, Los Angeles (1930): elaborate floodlighting to emphasize shiny black and gold, including spotlights on corner angels; openwork metal tower resembling an oil derrick was an aircraft beacon and neon sign and was echoed by towers on company gas stations. Floodlighting continued while company in bankruptcy during the Depression. Building design:
Morgan, Walls & Clements. Lighting design: Ralph Phillips. •
Kansas City Power & Light Company Building, Kansas City, Missouri (1931): color floodlighting with Thyratron control, luminous panels, red neon outlining in lantern. Building design:
Hoit, Price & Barnes. Lighting design: General Electric. •
Empire State Building, New York (1931): Initially lighted only at the top, with lights inside the mooring mast, bands of light at the 86th-floor observation deck and above, and 8 searchlights from the tip of the mast, which, however, could not be seen because of lack of material in the air at that height. Stronger single searchlight added in 1932. Four revolving "Freedom Lights" added at 90th floor in 1956, one pointing skyward at all times. In 1964, the entire top floodlit with a black band below, with the effect of a "chandelier suspended from the sky." Colored lighting from 1976, later updated; building is lit in a wide range of colors to mark holidays and other special occasions. Building design:
Shreve, Lamb & Harmon. Lighting design:
Meyer, Strong & Jones (1931),
Raymond Loewy (1956), Douglas Leigh (1976). •
Cities Service Building, New York (1932): increasing lighting on the upper stories, beginning at the corners, surmounted by a 20-foot glass lantern, a rare feature in America, and neon beacons at base and top of flagpole. Building design:
Clinton & Russell. Lighting design:
Alfred Paulus, Westinghouse Lamp Co.;
Horton Lees Lighting (update). •
Niagara-Hudson-Syracuse Lighting Company Building, Syracuse, New York (1932): Tower with illuminated glass corner panels, luminous glass pillars on ground floor, all lighted in multiple changing colors; floodlighted stainless steel and glass Spirit of Light atop tower. 1999 scheme, inaugurated at
Light up Syracuse, uses fluorescent and neon on computerized timer to produce similar effects. Building design:
Melvin L. King,
Bley and Lyman. Lighting design: unknown.
Howard Brandston and
Kevin Simonson, Brandston Partnership (1999). •
RCA Building,
Rockefeller Center, New York (1933): One of the first buildings of the new building complex, and immediately floodlighted, but only on the east side;
Lewis Mumford wrote that that was the best time to see the center: "Under artificial lighting, in a slight haze, the group of buildings that now make up the Center looks like one of
Hugh Ferriss' visions of the City of the Future." Relighted in 1960 and 1984, now the only Manhattan skyscraper lighted for its entire height. Building design:
L. Andrew Reinhard,
Harry Hofmeister, Raymond Hood,
Wallace Harrison,
Harvey Wiley Corbett. Lighting design:
Abe Feder (1984). •
General Electric Building, New York (1940): 1931 building with Gothic crown creating a night-time effect of lack of solidity, relighted in 1940 to showcase fluorescent lighting, with red lights inside and blue outside the crown and a dimmer on a timer added for the existing white lights to produce color changes; spotlighting of architectural details; blue fluorescents beneath windows, lighting only the glass. New lighting scheme in 1965: entire building floodlighted, east and west facades more brightly than north and south, gold lights in crown with randomly sparkling blue-white, yellow, and pink "jewels." Building design:
Cross & Cross. Lighting design:
A. F. Dickerson, General Electric (1940),
Robert E. Faucett, General Electric (1965).
Germany • 'Der Wachthof' (headquarters of
Berliner Wach- und Schließgesellschaft, Berlin Association of Watchmen and Locksmiths), Berlin (1926): facade renovation of contiguous commercial premises, unified by illuminated strips outlining the square facade, a large painted horizontal sign across the top, and a protruding vertical sign / illuminated strip. Building and lighting design:
Arthur Korn. • Tauentzienstraße 3, Berlin (1927): renovation and floor addition to a 19th-century commercial building with illuminated light-colored strips with brass lettering installed above each floor, much cited as an example of modernization and purification from ornament. Renovation and lighting design: Luckhardt Brothers and Anker (
Wassili Luckhardt,
Hans Luckhardt, and
Alfons Anker). •
Lichthaus Luz, Stuttgart (1927): multistory downtown store with projecting square bay window, with illuminated horizontal bands of white glass, rooftop rotating star outlined in two-color neon, another star projecting from the 2nd floor, and first floor all-glass full-width bay window illuminated, with white glass bands top and bottom (demolished). Building and lighting design:
Richard Döcker. •
C. A. Herpich Sons, Furriers, Berlin (1928, destroyed WW2): New facade and two set-back upper storeys on three older buildings, with ribbon windows alternating with travertine bands illuminated from above by lights behind opal glass. Replaced with blue neon in 1930. Building and lighting design:
Erich Mendelsohn. •
Titania Palast, Berlin (1928): movie theater with the highest degree of night lighting in Berlin, designed with lighting in mind. Concealed colored floodlights, backlighted translucent glass bands ran up the front edge of the 100-foot tower, across the top, and around the signboard area at its base, the roof edge had outline lighting, and the name of the theatre was spelled out in blue neon on red background along both facades. Building design:
Ernst Schöffler,
Carlo Schloenbach, and
Carl Jacobi. Lighting design:
Ernst Hölscher. •
Rudolf Petersdorff Department Store, Breslau (1928): on one facade of the corner building, terminating in a cantilevered semicircular corner section, ribbon windows illuminated by neon behind the transoms, reflected outwards by white curtains. Building and lighting design: Erich Mendelsohn. • Linenhaus FV Grünfeld, Kurfürstendamm 227, corner of Joachimsthaler Straße (largely destroyed WW2); in c1925 this older corner building was transformed with the ground, first and 2nd floors rebuilt as all glass horizontal windows, accented by lighting the underside of a projecting 2nd floor strip, with neon signs spruiking homewares in strips across the upper facade; in c1929 the upper signs were removed in favour of an attached structure across the top floors, which at night became a series of vertical strips resting an illuminated horizontal strip, topped by a tall sign spelling FVGRUNFELD. Designer unknown. •
Euopahaus,
Stresemannstraße, Berlin (1928-32): an entertainment and office complex, built with strip lighting around the eaves of the top level of the 10 storey block, with a thin blade structure that projects out from the building, runs up its full height, and continues up across the top of the roof. The blade hosts vertical neon strips, and vertical and horizontal signboards, spelling Allianz and versicherung (insurance). The roof later also hosted a very tall box structure with vertical strips, advertising ODOL (mouthwash). At the base of the sign, a set of thick L-shaped opalescent beams marked the entry, and the windows of the long first floor were outlined in neon; the names of the various occupants such were spelled out in neon along this face, as well as the top of the building. A coloured postcard shows the use of red, blue, white and yellow neon. Architects: Richard Bielenberg and Josef Moser (damaged in WW2 the sign elements were not reinstated) •
New Reich Chancellery, Berlin (1939, largely destroyed WW2): Floodlighting from nearby buildings and from trenches in courtyards and main entrance to make the building appear similar by day and night and make streetlighting unnecessary, and concealed between double glazing in windows of the Marble Gallery to mimic incoming daylight. Building design:
Albert Speer. Lighting design: Albert Speer and
Eberhard von der Trappen.
Elsewhere in Europe •
De Volharding Building, The Hague (1928): insurance cooperative headquarters clad entirely in glass, with glass-brick elevator stairway towers; light tower above illuminated rooftop sign; strips of plate-glass windows alternating with opal glass strips behind which lettering was mounted to form night-time advertising. "[T]he most famous of all luminous buildings." Building design:
Jan Buijs and Joan B. Lürsen. Lighting design: Jan Buijs with
Osram Lichthaus. •
Bata Store,
Wenceslas Square, Prague (1929): shoe store using illuminated opal glass bands carrying advertising, inspiring illumination on other central Prague buildings and causing bands of opal glass to become a trademark of other Bata stores. Building design:
Ludvik Kysela,
František L Gahura, and
Josef Gočar. Lighting design: Ludvik Kysela. •
Gaumont-Palace cinema, Paris (1932): bright floodlighting reflected on the sidewalk, plus light cascade on new tower added in building renovation and expansion; blue and green neon, 10-foot red neon letters. Renovation design:
Henri Belloc. Lighting design:
Les Établissements Paz e Silva. •
Simpson's Department Store, London (1936): Blue, red, and green neon tubes on dimmers above ribbon windows, to produce either colored or (by combining all three) white light; surfaces inclined to ensure even lighting, vertical light trough framing facade. Neon-lighted store name added later. Building design:
Joseph Emberton with
László Moholy-Nagy and
Felix Samuely. Lighting design: Joseph Emberton.
Postwar United States • Blau Gold Haus, Cologne (1952): Modernist building with integral lighting design using neon under the cornice and hidden incandescent lights in piers between windows to reflect off the turquoise and gold facade (the colors of
4711 eau-de-cologne). Building and lighting design:
Wilhelm Koep. •
Manufacturers Trust bank branch, New York (1954): a pioneer of glass-walled bank architecture, replacing the security of solid walls with that of visibility from the street; banking hall set back from the outside wall and it and outer edges of upper floors illuminated by a luminous ceiling. Building design:
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill. Lighting design:
Gordon Bunshaft Syska & Hennessy, Fischbach & Moore. •
Indianapolis Power & Light Company, Electric Building, Indianapolis (1956, 1968): 1924 office building floodlit with color available, in 1968 redesigned with stone cladding and halogen lamps (now replaced with quartz) with colored filters illuminating only the window recesses. Dimmer controls and programmed effects including symbols for holidays and a moving band of darkness created by shutting off lights on one floor at a time. Building design: Unknown (1924),
Lennox, Matthews, Simmons & Ford (1968). Lighting design:
George E. Ransford, IPL (1956),
Norman F. Schnitker, IPL (1968) •
Seagram Building, New York (1958): Tinted-windowed modernist skyscraper designed with a strip of luminous ceiling on outsides of all floors to counter sky glare during the day and provide a night-time "tower of light" appearance in contrast to daytime appearance; ground floor made four times brighter than upper floors by white marble illuminated from concealed lighting slots. Night illumination system not used since 1973. Building design:
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe,
Philip Johnson,
Ely Jacques Kahn. Lighting design:
Richard Kelly. •
Tishman Building, New York (1958): Slim office tower with setbacks, clad in folded aluminum, evenly illuminated by mercury vapor lamps to create "tower of light," a similar appearance to daytime but with the "666" of the address in red neon near the top. Building design:
Carson & Lundin. Lighting design:
Abe Feder. •
Embarcadero Center, San Francisco (1971-1973): The buildings are lit up every year in
green and
red during the
Christmas/
Hanukkah holidays, between the day after
Thanksgiving and
Epiphany. •
Chrysler Building, New York (1981): 1930 building was originally intended to have a lighted glass dome; triangular windows in the metallic spire were equipped with lights, but not lighted until after the Depression and then only for holidays. New owner in 1979 had these updated to fluorescents and floodlighting added on spire and tower shaft. Building design:
William Van Alen. Lighting design:
William Di Giacomo and Steve Negrin, William Di Giacomo Associates, based on William Van Alen designs. •
Bank of America Tower, Miami (1987): Main facade given setbacks to house floodlights; evenly lighted aluminum strips create a "luminous beacon"; usually white, but colored lenses placed by hand for special occasions. A city-wide illumination plan resulted from the building. Building design:
I. M. Pei and
Harold Fredenburgh, Pei Cobb Reed & Partners. Lighting design: Douglas Leigh.
Europe •
Thyssenhaus, Düsseldorf (1960): Skyscraper consisting of three slender slabs, two smaller ones sandwiching a larger, designed for two distinct night-time appearances: fluorescent ceiling lights near building edges to illuminate entire building from within as a stack of ribbon windows, or alternatively display of the company signet by illuminating only blue fluorescents placed on both sides of selected windows on each side of the building. This terminated when the company merged with
Thyssen in 1966. Building design:
Helmut Hentrich and
Hubert Petschnigg. Lighting design: Unknown. •
Pirelli Tower, Milan (1960): Skyscraper with central section flanked by two tapering thinner sections, designed as "self-lighting architecture", with cantilevered roof illuminated from beneath. Building design:
Gio Ponti with Antonio Fornaroli and Alberto Rosselli, and engineers
Pier Luigi Nervi and Arturo Danusso. Lighting design: Gio Ponti, Antonio Fornaroli, and Alberto Rosselli.
Since the 1980s •
Tower of Winds, Yokohama (1986): Renovated ventilation and water tower covered in mirrors, encircled by 12 neon bands, enclosed in a steel framework with floodlights and 1,200 bulbs, covered in perforated steel sheeting to look solid in daylight; all lighting computer-controlled to reflect wind direction and speed and street noise in "environmental music" or an "audio-visual seismograph". Building and lighting design:
Toyo Ito, lighting design with Kaoro Mende, TL Yamigawa Labs, and Masami Usuki. •
Kirin Plaza, Osaka (1988; demolished 2008): Almost windowless black granite building with metal elements, with four light towers, described by critics as combining "Zen and kitsch" and contrasting with advertising-filled facades of nearby buildings. Initial lighting scheme involved computerized colored lights appearing three times a night. Building and lighting design:
Shin Takamatsu. •
NEC Supertower, Tokyo (1990): Upper stories of tower floodlighted on the narrow sides with lights concealed in plaza vegetation; tinted blue in spring and summer, coral in fall and winter, and turning off in rising stages every hour between 7:00 and midnight, leading to the nickname "watchtower." Perimeter ceiling lighting on ribbon windows on broad sides. Lighting scheme won an international award. Building design:
Nikken Sekkei. Lighting design:
Motoko Ishii. •
Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur (1996): Floodlighting almost entirely on inner faces of twin towers, emphasizing the space between; upper floors encircled with light from setbacks; the two pinnacles topped by internally illuminated spheres at the base and smaller floodlighted spheres at tops of finials. Uplighting extends above towers and is reflected in clouds. Scheme won an Illuminating Engineering Society merit award. Building design:
Cesar Pelli and
Fred Clarke, Cesar Pelli and Associates. Lighting design: Howard Brandston, Scott Matthews, Chou Lien, Jung Soo Kim, H. M. Brandston and Partners. • Tower of Time, Manchester (1996): Technical equipment tower for
Bridgewater Hall converted into "a huge, abstract clock": lights inside glass facade change color to indicate
Zodiac sign, those outside to indicate season; lines of tubing on each of the five floors lit incrementally to indicate Monday through Friday; rapid sequence of color changes "chimes" the quarter hours. Building design:
Renton Howard Wood Levin. Lighting design:
Jonathan Speirs, Jonathan Speirs & Associates. •
Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz (1996). Art museum in the form of a cube with facade of frosted glass shingles three feet outside building walls; daylight penetrates through these and translucent ceiling, at night floodlighted from inside the glass skin (the space also housing technical equipment). Building design:
Peter Zumthor. Lighting design: Peter Zumthor and
James Turrell (1997),
Keith Sonner (199),
Tony Oursler (2001). •
Verbundnetz AG, Administration Building, Leipzig (1997). A modern example of a power company building using lighting to advertise electricity: light from red, yellow, and blue neon tubes between the two layers of glass forming the facade of the northeast tower is reflected outward by the ceiling and metal louvers and is computer-controlled to reflect the temperature changes to which the building systems are responding. Building design: Becker, Gewers, Kühn & Kühn. Lighting design:
James Turrell. •
Victorian Arts Centre, Melbourne (1997 renovation). Replacement spire in 1973–84 building replaces floodlighting with eight lighting systems, thousands of lights including incandescents, halogen, neon, strobes, color-changing floodlights at base, and fiber-optic cable. Building design:
Roy Grounds (1973);
Peter McIntyre and
Bob Sturrock (new spire, 1997). Lighting design:
Barry Webb with
Stephen Found,
Bytecraft Australia. •
Theme Building and light columns,
Los Angeles International Airport (1997). Building in
futuristic style originally lit with amber floodlights to symbolize optimism in the jet age. 1997 lighting redesign floodlights building from below to avoid blinding patrons in restaurant, plus observation deck lights to light the arches that cross above it. Dichroic color changers programmed to change gradually over several minutes, producing many intermediate color effects, with a brief sequence of rapid changes on the quarter hour. In 2000, addition of 15 110-foot glass pylons in a circle at airport entrance, plus 11 along Century Boulevard, of increasing height to evoke the flight path of an aircraft after takeoff. Pylons lit from within in changing colors, nicknamed the "Psychedelic Stonehenge," won Lighting Dimensions International's Lighting Designer of the Year award for
Dawn Hollingsworth. Building design:
James Langenheim,
Charles Luckman,
William Pereira,
Welton Becket,
Paul Williams; light columns:
Nadel architects. Lighting design:
Michael Valentino,
Walt Disney Imagineering; light columns: Dawn Hollingsworth, Jeremy Windle, Erin Powell, Moody Ravitz Hollingsworth Lighting Design, Inc. •
Burj al Arab hotel, Dubai (1999). Metal exoskeleton lighted in white from base; crown of building and fiberglass facade of atrium lighted by luminaires at various levels and on bridge to island that change colors every half hour, plus colored strobes, searchlights, and projection of images on special occasions. Lighting design won a 2000 International Illumination Design Award. Building design:
W. A. Atkins & Partners,
Tom Wright design director. Lighting design:
Jonathan Speirs, Gavin Fraser, Malcolm Innes, Alan Mitchell, James Mason and Iain Ruxton, Jonathan Speirs & Associates. • Forty-Second Street Studios, New York (2000). Rehearsal space building meets city requirement for
Times Square buildings to provide lighted signs with a screen of steel blades on which more than 500 colored abstract patterns are projected, changing slowly on Monday night and more rapidly as the week progresses, every few seconds on weekends. Translucent shades behind the frame lit by fluorescents to create a background; 175-foot acrylic spire at one side of building also changes color; 30-foot glass square with dichroic fins on lower floors recalls theatre facade previously on site and refracts daytime light. Building design:
Platt Byard Dovell. Lighting design:
Anne Militello, Vortex Lighting, and
James Carpenter. •
Goodman Theatre Center, Chicago (2001). Computer-controlled LED display on 96-panel facade, capable of 16.7 million colors and numerous effects, plus crown of LEDs over entrance rotunda changing colors in harmony. Integration of music to produce a giant
color organ planned. Building design:
Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects and Decker Legge Kemp Architecture. Lighting design:
Rich Locklin, Lightswitch, and
Color Kinetics. •
Sony Center,
Potsdamer Platz, Berlin (2001). Perimeter fluorescent lighting in office tower and adjacent buildings; ten-story atrium of entertainment center roofed by folded fiberglass on which bright white light is projected beginning before sunset to extend daylight, followed by a series of 21-second artificial sunsets from sunset to midnight, dark blue until early morning, and bright white once more until daylight. Building design:
Helmut Jahn. Lighting design:
Yann Kersalé and L'Observatoire International. •
D-Tower, Doetinchem, Netherlands (2004): 12-meter tower of translucent epoxy resin, reminiscent of a nerve cell in form, displaying computer-generated colors representing citizens' dominant mood as ascertained from a daily questionnaire. Design:
Lars Spuybroek, NOX. •
Torre Glòries, Barcelona (2005). Office tower "glow[ing] at night as a colorful monolith." Building design:
Jean Nouvel. Lighting design: Yann Kersalé. File:Paramount Building Jorge Eduardo Rubies.jpg|
Paramount Building in
Times Square, 1926 by
Rapp and Rapp, with glass ball reilluminated in 1998; setback floodlighting also reactivated at that time File:Seagram Building-NewYork-4.jpg|Glass walls and illuminated ceilings in the
Seagram Building in New York, 1958 by
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe,
Philip Johnson, and
Ely Jacques Kahn; lighting design
Richard Kelly File:LAX LA.jpg|
Theme Building at
Los Angeles International Airport, 1961 by
James Langenheim,
Pereira-
Luckman,
et al.; lighting design
Michael Valentino,
Walt Disney Imagineering; photographed in 2007 File:Rockefeller Center view 4117252950 753db0792e.jpg|
Empire State Building lighted in blue and white at sunset on 19 November 2009; lighting design
Douglas Leigh File:Tower of Winds2.jpg|
Tower of Winds, Yokohama, 1986 by
Toyo Ito; lighting design Toyo Ito, TL Yamigawa Labs, Masami Usuki File:Miamiatnightpink.jpg|
Miami Tower lighted pink for Valentine's Day in 2007, 1987 by
I. M. Pei and
Harold Fredenburgh, Pei Cobb Reed & Partners; lighting design Douglas Leigh File:Petronas Towers Night (cuadrado - square).jpg|
Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur, 1996 by
Cesar Pelli and
Fred Clarke, Cesar Pelli and Associates; lighting design
Howard Brandston, Scott Matthews, Chou Lien, Jung Soo Kim File:Berlin-Sony Center-1.jpg|Interior view of
Sony Center atrium, Berlin, 2000 by
Helmut Jahn, during artificial sunset sequence; lighting design
Yann Kersalé File:Noční Torre Agbar.jpg|
Torre Glòries, Barcelona, 2005 by
Jean Nouvel; lighting design Yann Kersalé; photographed in 2011 File:Frankfurt Hauptwache Luminale.JPG|Lighting in central Frankfurt during
Light+building tradeshow and Luminale lighting festival, April 2008 File:Frankfurter Börse Luminale 2008.jpg|
Frankfurt Stock Exchange illuminated for Luminale 2008 ==References==