|
News Westpac Place Communication and colour for bank HQ The scheme illuminates the 68-metre-high gothic style tower using primarily low wattage "white" metal halide lamps to enhance the sandy Bath and Clipsham stone. Efficiency The University has worked closely with Planning and Conservation Officers from Bristol City Council and with English Heritage to ensure that the scheme is environmentally friendly as well as in keeping with the building and its surroundings. The floodlights are energy-efficient, employ attachments to tailor the beam distributions and are switched on at dusk and off at midnight. Additionally, far less light is needed on a clean stone building than on one which is encrusted with the grime of centuries. The total load is under 6kW. Comfort Dave Skelhorne, the University's Contract Supervisor, said: "Switching on the lights was the final piece in the jigsaw of repair, renovation and illumination of the tower - a mammoth project which has taken two years to complete. The tower looks truly magnificent and will now be an even more impressive sight on the city's skyline." Harry Patch, a 109-year-old veteran of the Great War and a member of the workforce which constructed the tower in the 1920s, switched on the new floodlights. Electrical work was by AMP Electrical Ltd of Bristol. |