Park Lighting
Decorative lighting for public parks, botanical gardens, and green spaces. Emphasis on pedestrian scale (3–6m poles), low-glare optics, and ambient warmth. Lotus,…
Every public space has unique lighting requirements — lux levels, pole heights, aesthetics, and structural demands. Find your application below.
Decorative lighting for public parks, botanical gardens, and green spaces. Emphasis on pedestrian scale (3–6m poles), low-glare optics, and ambient warmth. Lotus,…
Atmospheric decorative lighting along river promenades, ghats, and lakefronts. Corrosion-resistant construction essential. Sabarmati, Gomti, and Yamuna riverfront projects benchmark this application.
Premium decorative lighting for gated communities, township roads, and residential corridors. Balances aesthetics with operational efficiency. Common applications include entry gates, main…
Integrated smart poles for AMRUT and Smart Cities Mission projects. Combines LED lighting with CCTV, Wi-Fi, environmental sensors, and smart dimming. SCADA-enabled…
Historically sensitive decorative lighting for heritage conservation areas, old bazaars, fort corridors, and colonial streetscapes. INTACH-compliant designs with antique finishes and period-appropriate…
Dual-arm decorative poles for road medians, national highways, and urban expressways. Combines road illumination standards (IS:1944) with architectural visual identity. Aerodynamic profiles…
Decorative lighting for shopping streets, market corridors, and commercial boulevards. High CRI, reduced glare, and visual merchandising compatibility. Brand identity through pole…
Solar decorative poles for locations without grid connectivity — rural roads, remote parks, and off-grid townships. Full solar-LiFePO4 systems with 3–5 day…
Each public lighting application in India is governed by IS:1944 (street and area lighting), NBC 2016 illumination standards, and application-specific civic body guidelines. Parks require 10–20 lux with warm 2700–3000K colour temperature to create an ambient pedestrian environment. Highway medians demand 30–50 lux with 4000–5000K for visibility and safety. Heritage zones have aesthetic restrictions that limit pole profiles and finish options to period-appropriate designs.
Smart city applications add data-layer requirements — CCTV mounting plates, Wi-Fi access point brackets, 5G antenna preparations, and cable management for environmental sensors. Understanding these requirements early in the design stage prevents costly retrofits and helps achieve AMRUT 2.0 compliance from day one.