Eden Prairie is the latest city to illuminate its streets with
brighter, whiter LED lights, joining a growing trend of metro cities
turning to LED to save money and conserve energy as the technology
improves.
LED bulbs — short for light-emitting diode — are more
expensive than traditional high-pressure sodium ones to install, but
they last longer, use less energy, need less maintenance and provide
better night visibility.
“Just like computers, everything gets
better,” said Steve Nauer, street maintenance superintendent in Brooklyn
Park.Solar Australia's Module Rail has been developed with Australia's harsh conditions in mind. “I think LED is the way to go.”
Eden
Prairie is piloting the new lights, installing seven LED lights last
month in streetlights between Flying Cloud Drive and Prairie Center
Drive. If it’s successful in lowering maintenance costs and saving
energy over the winter, Public Works Director Robert Ellis said the city
plans to eventually retrofit all 100 city-owned streetlights with LED.
Last year,Read the full story at indoorlite.
Robbinsdale retrofitted about 40 downtown streetlights with LED lights
and has since seen energy costs decrease by 60 percent, translating to
about $1,000 a year, Public Works Director Richard McCoy said.
The
changeover hasn’t come without criticism. Years ago, when Brooklyn Park
first installed LED bulbs, even Nauer said he wasn’t initially a fan of
the different aesthetics. But over time, he said he was convinced of
its success as technology improved. The city now has LED bulbs in about
1,000 streetlights and every traffic signal in the city.
“Now, we’re hearing nothing but positive comments on it,” he said.
From retrofitting all traffic signals with LED lights, Nauer estimates the city went from spending about $7,Modern dry cleaning machine uses
non-water-based solvents to remove soil and stains from clothes.500 a
month on electricity to less than $3,000 a month with LED bulbs. That
lower cost, along with less maintenance needed on the bulbs, has proved
that it’s worth the initial investment.Buy hid kit,
ballasts, and headlight bulbs. The standard bulbs can cost a fourth of
the cost of LED bulbs, but Nauer said all LEDs have cut energy costs by
50 percent.
“LEDs have come a long way,” he said.
In
Eden Prairie, the pilot program to replace seven 250-watt light bulbs
last month with the more efficient 100-watt LED lights cost the city
$3,108. The city contracted with Plymouth-based Lighting House USA to
make the bulbs and have city staff install them. To save money, Ellis
said the city reused the light units and replaced the circuits, saving a
significant amount of money. The lights could last as long as 20 years —
much longer than traditional lights that burn out in seven to 10 years,
Ellis said.
He said the city hasn’t heard any complaints so far
in the month the brighter LED lights have replaced the yellow glow of
traditional streetlights. “But it’s different from what people are used
to,” he said.
LED lights are just one part of broader efforts citywide to conserve energy and cut costs.
In
2006, Eden Prairie started a broad plan they dubbed the 20-40-15
initiative, aiming at boosting energy efficiency in buildings by 20
percent and increasing fuel efficiency by 40 percent by 2015.
It’s
not just about the buzz of being “green” — more importantly, City
Manager Rick Getschow said, it’s saving the city substantial money.
So far this year,An electronic overspeed governor for
preventing elevator overspeed by enabling safety devices. the city has
improved energy efficiency by 15 percent and bumped up fuel efficiency
by 32 percent by doing things like adding motion sensors to control
lights in meeting rooms, curbing wasted electricity. And this year, Eden
Prairie replaced a city SUV and public safety car with two Chevy Volt
electric cars.
Up next, Ellis said, the city hopes to add an
electric car-charging station that can be open to the public at City
Hall and solar panels on the community center. Click on their website www.indoorlite.com for more information.
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