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The practical commercial sector, for example workshops, industry or various utility rooms such as multi-storey car parks, is also characterised by an individual style. This can be described as follows: A lighting product installed there must integrate into the overall picture in an unobtrusive way, it must look professional and, above all, be professional. In these areas, it is the functional and not the design properties of light that are important. A modelled light in a production hall, for example, is more likely to cause difficulties in machine operation than simplify it. Light in the commercial sector must illuminate effectively - light and shadows are out of place in the often dangerous machine work. Technical light is therefore particularly effective in terms of light quality and particularly unobtrusive in design.
Workshops, industry and manufacturing as well as car parks: some areas of application for technical lighting have already been mentioned. But even within these areas there are differences in terms of the nature of a luminaire. The technical lighting category includes, for example, the often very robust and impact-resistant surface-mounted diffuser luminaires. There are also light strips and high bay spotlights. The latter often use metal halide lamps to provide optimum light with a correspondingly long service life of the light source. High-bay spotlights illuminate exhibition areas and industrial workshops. The situation is slightly different with recessed louvre luminaires. These are also suitable for office areas, where there are corresponding regulations for lighting, due to the almost complete absence of glare. Hairdressing salons also use louvre luminaires to achieve glare-free lighting for customers.
As already mentioned, technical lighting is used to optimise illumination. However, optimum illumination does not always mean maximum shadow-free light. On the contrary: the shop area also counts as commercial use. And this is primarily about sales-promoting lighting. This accentuates interesting sales areas and, for example, pushes the centre aisle into the background with comparatively low lighting. This structures the entire sales area and directs the customer's gaze to the offers that are of interest to them.
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