Circadian Lighting: A Bright Idea with Pros and Cons
Finally! Awareness is growing around the profound impact lighting has on human health and happiness. As a result, circadian lighting has become a buzzword in the home design industry, but what exactly is it and is it worth the large investment?
An understanding of how light affects the body is integral to designing a home that supports wellness. In this 7th post of the Happy by Design series, I explain what circadian lighting aims to achieve and I shed light on how to design better lighting without an expensive control system.
What is Circadian Lighting?
Circadian lighting is an emerging lighting technology that focuses on light intensity, spectrum, and timing that mimic the changes of light produced by the sun throughout the day.
As you might remember, exposure to daylight has a profound impact on human health and circadian rhythm. The blue wavelengths of light from the sun suppresses melatonin, the hormone responsible for causing sleepiness. As the light from the sun shifts throughout the day, so too do our levels of energy and alertness.
Early morning sunlight is soft and has little blue light, allowing those who wake with the sun to have a gradual and calm entry into their day. The intensity and amount of blue wavelengths emitted by the sun peak around midday when we are the most active. As the day moves into evening, light intensity lessens and the wavelengths lengthen towards the red end of the spectrum, cueing the release of melatonin and signaling the body to wind down and prepare for sleep.
With circadian lighting, this progression is recreated in your home through the use of high-tech adjustable LED Smart bulbs. These Smart bulbs perform on an expensive Smart lighting system with a timer set to increase the brightness and blue light as the day progresses, peaking around midday, and then reducing into the evening.
I WANT A HOME THAT SUPPORTS CIRCADIAN RHYTHM!
Circadian Lighting Pros & Cons
The concept of circadian lighting does have the potential to support a healthier circadian rhythm, however this technology is still being developed. The following are current pros and cons of incorporating circadian lighting technology in your home.
Pros
- Can be effective. A properly installed, calibrated, and programmed circadian lighting system can deliver the intensity and spectrum of light at the right times of day that impact physiological responses to light that support a healthier circadian rhythm.
- Can improve required wavelengths. Circadian lighting tends to focus on increasing blue light exposure, aiming to produce the peak 490nm blue wavelengths produced by the midday sun. This is great for people who live or work in dark spaces that receive little to no natural light. Exposure to these wavelengths during the daytime help to keep the mind and body alert and active.
- Can be easy and hands off. The more advanced circadian lighting systems are programmable so that the lights change intensity and color spectrum at the appropriate times of day without you needing to think about it.
Cons
- Can be confusing. Just because you have a dimmable lighting system doesn’t mean you have circadian effective light. Likewise, just because you use color temperature changing Smart bulbs doesn’t mean you’ve achieved the goal of circadian lighting. Circadian lighting requires three conditions to be met at all points in time: the proper intensity of the proper spectrum at the proper timing.
- Can be very expensive. A whole house Smart lighting system that’s able to control all three conditions (intensity, spectrum, and timing) to send signals to the brain and trigger circadian responses is a pricey endeavor.
- Programming can be challenging. Calculations are required to find the proper intensity and spectrum of light for each time of day. Free online calculators are available to help homeowners find lighting measurements needed. Handheld devices, called spectroradiometers, are used to take lighting measurements to let you know whether you’re meeting the target circadian effective light.
- Finding a manufacturer can be challenging. There are manufacturers of high integrity that are taking the science very seriously, however there are also many people who are just taking advantage of the buzzword and marketing “circadian lighting” to their benefit. This is akin to Greenwashing in the lighting industry. Former architect, lighting expert, and professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Mariana Figueiro recommends you take your own measurements and calculations to make sure you understand what you’re getting from the manufacturer.
- Unbacked claims. Some of the less reputable circadian lighting companies make claims that only specialized LED Smart bulbs are able to produce the light that sends circadian signals to the brain. In reality, all regular white LED and fluorescent bulbs produce light within the 400-490nm spectrum that impacts circadian rhythm.
- Not all Smart bulbs are created equal. Many Smart bulbs are only able to increase blue light exposure, while others only adjust the color temperature so that less visible blue light is seen, meanwhile still emitting high levels of non-visible blue wavelengths that disrupt sleep.
- Effective Smart bulbs are expensive. The Smart bulbs that are actually capable of reducing the blue wavelengths of light that impact circadian rhythm tend to be very expensive in the range of $50/bulb.
- LED drawbacks. There are health implications to a home full of LED lights. In reference to LED and Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs a Harvard Medical School publication stated, “the quest for energy-efficient lighting could be at odds with personal health.” Stay tuned for our next blog about the physiological impacts of different light sources.
- Can add too much blue light. Circadian lighting does not tackle the issue of overexposure to high intensity blue lights coming from electronics, cell phones, computers, tablets, flat-screen TVs, gaming systems, internal car lighting, headlights, streetlamps, and even children’s toys. You are exposed to far more blue lights that disrupt circadian rhythm than you may realize and adding more blue light emitting LEDs to your home may actually further disrupt your circadian rhythm.
- Doesn’t consider darkness. Circadian lighting systems are myopically focused on lighting, and while this may seem obvious, it’s important to note that darkness plays a significant role in maintaining a healthy circadian rhythm, achieving optimal sleep, and sustaining a healthy body.
Circadian lighting is NOT a replacement for exposure to natural daylight.
While circadian lighting is a logical and well-intended response to the era of indoor living that humanity now finds themselves in, it is not a replacement for exposure to natural daylight. This technology alone falls short of a home intuitively designed to maximize natural lighting, supported by artificial lighting that takes into consideration your lifestyle, behaviors, and habits.
WHOA! I’M READY TO BOOK MY CONSULTATION!
Wellness Lighting by Pippin: Balancing Daylight and Darkness Cycles
A home designed by Pippin takes into consideration the path of the sun across your property to achieve the closest relationship with the natural processes of daylight and darkness. We focus on designing for maximized natural light first and only use artificial light to supplement for the times and spaces that cannot be touched by the sun. Click HERE to read our last blog about designing for maximized daylight.
We work closely as a cohort with interior and lighting designers to co-create spaces that also focus on maximized darkness in the bedrooms to support the deepest sleep possible. Without proper sleep, your health and happiness suffer greatly.
Ideally, we should all sleep in complete darkness, however homes rarely support this essential component for optimal sleep. The Sleep Foundation emphasizes the significance of darkness when sleeping and the negative impacts of light during slumber hours which result in fragmented sleep, eye strain, weight gain, and even cancer risks.
And, no, closing your eyes does not entirely block light.
The following are ways we, as a team, design your home for darkness:
- When possible, design bedroom windows to face away from outside lights (streetlights, headlights, porchlights, lights from surrounding neighbors, etc.).
- Utilize natural barriers such as mature trees to block light pollution.
- Encourage the reduction or elimination of technology in your bedroom with lights that stay on all night.
- Blackout shades or other coverings for windows that cannot avoid light pollution.
I WANT A HOME THAT SUPPORTS BETTER SLEEP!
Intuitive Artificial Lighting
When designing for the healthiest artificial lighting in your home that supports both daylight and darkness, we first determine your specific lifestyle and where in your home you spend the most of your time and when. Then our team of professionals help you select lighting from light sources with the appropriate spectrum, color temperature, and brightness for each area.
Incandescent and halogen lights simulate the morning sun with little blue light and a yellow hue. These are best in areas of the home where you start your day, like a kitchen or bathroom. Yellow is an energizing joyful color that your body naturally associates with morning. Click HERE to learn more about how you physiologically respond to yellow.
Areas of the home where you conduct most of your highly energized activities, like an office, studio, workshop, or gym are best supported with lighting that mimics the blue light from midday sun such as a bright Neutral White bulb.
Warmer, reddish, low lighting that mimics the sunset triggers the body to relax, unwind from the day, and prepare for sleep. This lighting is best used in bedrooms, living rooms, or other relaxing spaces.
An understanding of different light sources, the kind of light they emit, their color temperature, and brightness will help you feel more naturally connected with your home, allowing each space to create the physiological reactions that support the way you want to be living. This will be discussed in detail in the next blog.
Two Cents on an Expensive Lighting System
We believe in the potential for intelligent technology to enhance your health and happiness at home, however we also recognize that there tends to be a delay from the time a product or system is released into the market till the full effects and benefits of that technology are realized.
Where the technology currently stands today, circadian lighting is most beneficial for use in office buildings, hospitals, and other commercial spaces where people work for long hours during the day without access to natural light. Commercial spaces have notoriously neglected human health in their design.
We encourage fellow home designers to join us
in the mission to design better homes to live in.
However, home design has also lagged in designing for optimal health and so it’s important that homeowners and home designers do not rely on a new technology to replace the inherent health benefits of natural light exposure. We encourage fellow home designers to join us in the mission to design better homes to live in, homes that work in unison with the natural environment to support circadian rhythm.
Your home CAN support your health, happiness, and circadian rhythm without needing to purchase an expensive whole-house circadian lighting system.
Stay tuned for our next blog that dives deeper into how different light sources affect you mentally and physically and how to use them to design a healthy happy home.
I intend you see the light with what’s best for you and your home.
Fully supportive of you,