Using an LED lighting solution from Lumenpulse, the Kennedy Space Center has become the first museum to display a space shuttle in full flight mode. Suspending the space shuttle Atlantis 30 feet in the air, the museum's new exhibit uses advanced lighting techniques to reveal the orbiter as it would appear in space.
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Design firm Fisher Marantz Stone used over 250 LED fixtures from Lumenpulse to recreate the lighting conditions in space, helping to display Atlantis in full flight mode.
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Designed by lighting design firm Fisher Marantz Stone, the museum's lighting scheme uses over 250 Lumenpulse fixtures, which can be varied in color temperature and hue to recreate the unusual lighting conditions in outer space.
"Form factor and flexibility were essential to this project, and the Lumenpulse fixtures were a perfect fit, particularly since they offered tighter distribution options in high-wattage, high-lumen packages," said Paula Martinez-Nobles, Project Manager at Fisher Marantz Stone.
NASA is already well acquainted with LED technology: tunable, dynamic white technology is used to regulate the sleeping patterns of astronauts. In fact, the Kennedy Space Center had pushed for the use of LED when it came time to illuminate the shuttle.
"The Space Center wanted to ensure reliability and simplify maintenance issues - they didn't want to crawl above the orbiter to change light bulbs every few months - so using LED fixtures was a requirement," she said.
For Francois-Xavier Souvay, Lumenpulse President and CEO, the exhibit not only illustrates the power of current LED technology, it also gives the space shuttle Atlantis the tribute it deserves.
"Anyone interested in NASA's space shuttle program, or the orbiter itself, would have been disappointed to see it displayed in a traditional museum setting. This modern, dynamic lighting design brings visitors nose to nose with Atlantis, as it would appear in space. It's very dramatic, and very appropriate for such an important piece of space history. We're honored to have been a part of this exciting exhibit," he said.
The space shuttle Atlantis is the last orbiter to have been flown in space. It is the centerpiece of the new 90,000 square feet exhibit, which is dedicated to NASA's Space Shuttle Program.