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Why
ATM Lighting
How many people have not ever
visited an ATM? Not very many. Some do so a
lot. ATM's have become a staple of modern life.
So most everyone has first
hand experienced the various effects of "security
lighting" in the vicinity of an ATM. It varies
widely.
In ATM lighting, there is the
"Good," the "Bad," and the "Ugly."
We discuss here some of these
differences, and we will refer in some detail to the
Illuminating Engineering Society of North America's
Design Guide DG-9-97, which has the title:
"Lighting for Automatic Teller Machines."
The "Good" ones are
those that are designed and installed following the
IESNA's recommendations in their Design Guide. We
quote in entirety the Introduction to the Design Guide:
"The ATM environment requires adequate illuminance so
users can perform reading and writing tasks, as well as
enjoy safe passage to and from the ATM location.
The customers' unrestricted access to ATMs means that
proper lighting is a primary requirement during all
hours of daylight and darkness. This guide will
provide recommended illuminance levels, explain the need
for glare control, and suggest methods to solve many ATM
related lighting problems. Both the ATM lighting
requirements for transaction processing and for safety
are treated as major concerns."
IDA thinks everyone would agree.
Sections of the Design Guide
are as follows:
1.0 Introduction.
2.0 Task, Equipment, Location.
3.0 Lighting Objectives.
4.0 Lighting Design Variables.
5.0 Illuminance Criteria.
5.1 ATMs and the Immediate Surround.
5.2 Exterior ATM Approach Areas.
5.3 Minimizing Glare.
5.4 Avoiding Veiling Reflections.
5.5 Light Source Color Rendering.
6.0 Lighting System Choices.
7.0 Current Governmental Regulations.
8.0 Other Design Considerations.
9.0 Example Solutions
10.0 Conclusions
Let us note especially Section
5.3, on glare, an important criteria often neglected.
A quote from this section: "Direct visibility
glare prevents the ATM customer from observing objects
or an approaching perpetrator. Luminaires should
be carefully selected and carefully located in order to
minimize glare. Not all tasks at the ATM require
the same level of illuminance, but uniformity is
important if glare is to be kept to a minimum.
Exterior lighting should blend from one area to the
next, and the uniformity ratios should follow IESNA
recommendations."
So it is clear that ATMs that
are "Good" have lighting levels that meet (but do not
much exceed) the IESNA recommended lighting levels (if
overlit, they will have too much contrast with adjacent
areas, and likely will be glary), and they will have
minimum glare. They will feel comfortable and safe
to the customers.
We quote also from Section
9.1, on Outdoor Solutions: "Large Approach Areas.
If the approach to the ATM is across a large area (2.5
times the mounting height of the light fixtures or
more), fixtures should be installed at the building
(lighting outward) and at the approach perimeter
(lighting inward). If the wall of the building
where the ATM is installed allows fixtures to be at
least 3.7 m (12 ft) above the ground, the light can
adequately cover a length of 2.8 m (30 ft), with the
exact dimensions depending on the light fixture and
distribution pattern selected. Horizontal cut off
type fixtures should be considered here because they can
project the light without producing glare. For
areas beyond 2.5 items the mounting height, use a pole
mounted luminaire strategically located to illuminate
the total area without interfering with the function of
the space and normal movements. Important
limitations [bolding as in the DG]: Avoid using
luminaires which illuminate areas greater than 2.5 time
their mounting height. These types of fixtures can
produce excess vertical illuminance, which can result in
direct disability glare. And where fixtures are
installed at the building lighting outward, they
typically create glare problems and contribute to light
trespass."
We note also that the new
edition of the IESNA Lighting Handbook (9th edition) in
the chapter on Security Lighting (Chapter 29) says:
"Stray light from security lighting installations can be
considered a light trespass by neighbors," and
also "Disability glare is caused by light scattered in
the eye. Care in the selection of luminaires and
pole heights is essential."
Now on to the "Bad."
These installations arise from two major reasons.
First, the owner of the ATM does not understand good
lighting installations from bad, nor more generally what
good lighting is. They often have only one goal:
The More the Better. Second, the lighting
"designer" has the same gap in their knowledge of good
lighting, or if they do understand it, can not sell the
advantages of good lighting to the owner. It is a
sad fact that many lighting installations are built
according to these perceived needs. No one
questions the owners desire for an efficient, useful,
and safe ATM installation. They just don't know
how lighting relates to that goal.
An even worse example of
lighting specifications comes from state or local
legislators, who have the same overall goals as the
owners and also share the same sad lack of knowledge of
lighting. For example, California Assembly Bill
No. 244 includes a section on lighting of ATMs.
This specifies a requirement of two candlefoot power
within 50 feet of all unobstructed directions from the
face of the ATM. There is no such unit as
candlefoot power, but they define it in the bill as "the
light intensity of candles on a horizontal plane at 36
inches above ground level and five feet in front of the
area to be measured." Lighting with candles?
Horizontal rather than vertical illuminance? Why
36 inches? Why five feet? And what is this
non-existent lighting level unit?
This sort of requirement has
been copied or emulated by other states. For
example. a 1995 State of New York bill says: "a minimum
illuminance of two candlefoot power is maintained on a
horizontal plane at a point fifty feet in all
unobstructed directions from the ATM, measured at a
point five feet above the ground surface."
Candlefoot again. And who in the world will be
looking on a horizontal plane five feet above the ground
to benefit from this strange wording?
How can state legislators or
their lawyers or advisors come to such strange and
counterproductive language? It boggles the mind,
but these are existing lighting ordinances. There
are no words about the quality of lighting, discomfort
or disability glare. No understanding about the
difference between horizontal or vertical illuminance.
And where did candlefoot power come from?
Now to the Ugly: These
installations come from "designers" or installers trying
to comply with either the owner's or the state's
requirements. The lighting is normally mounted on
the building wall, at what seems to be random mounting
heights, often glaring right into the customer's eyes as
they approach or use the ATM. Floodlights are
projected horizontally to provide the required "candlefoot
power" levels. This is the cheap and dirty and
counterproductive way to do it. It should be
avoided at all costs by any owners and any legislators
seriously interested in protecting their customers and
their facilities.
We note also the recent
Department of Justice report on crime and lighting,
where it asks relative to ATM lighting: Who is
being protected, the customer or the criminal?
Sound bites:
Floodlight equals Glare
Light.
It costs no more in initial costs to do it right.
Good lighting means real security and safety, bad
lighting compromises both.
Reference: IESNA
Design Guide DG-9-97, Lighting for Automated Teller
Machines, prepared by the IESNA Financial Facilities
Committee, copyrighted by the IESNA, 1997. IESNA,
120 Wall Street, New York NY 10005.
Clients We are having an
upgrade at College. The system we are getting consists
of 72 dimmers (+24 we already have), 8 Moving heads (+2
we already have), 4 ultra bright Par 64 LED and we also
have 2 scroller already in stock.
We have a Fat Frog board at the moment (I know this
board won't handle as this comftably), would it be worth
while up-grading the board for a Frog 2 been as we have
got the money to do it?
Anybody have any suggestions? Or any opinions on the
Frog 2 or this upgrade?
CheersChoose |